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Identities
Global Studies in Culture and Power
Volume 6, 1999 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

Wedded to work: Class struggles and gendered identities in the restructuring of the Ecuadorian Banana industry

Pages 91-120 | Published online: 04 May 2010
 

From 1934 to 1962, the United Fruit Company owned and operated Hacienda Tenguel, an immense banana plantation in Ecuador's southern coast. In an effort to control the working‐class of Tenguel, United Fruit implemented a system of plantation management that was rooted in the support and manipulation of gendered institutions and practices. In the end, the system backfired and the workers invaded the entire property, using the same sets of gendered relationships, rights, and identities that the company had developed in order to produce a docile labor force. In contrast, the current system of contract farming, backed by the state, has made it impossible to adopt the identity of “worker” in a more subjective and political sense. Plantations, now severed from the daily life of the family and community, are no longer sites where a politically meaningful sense of class identity is forged. In examining this process of restructuring, this essay explores the complex and changing relationships between political struggle, the formation of class and gender identities, and processes of capitalist transformation.

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