Introduction
1. Feminist or Secretary?
2. At the Intersection of Sex Equality and Economic Justice
3. The Progressional and Professional Paths Intertwined
4. Overutilized and Underenforced
5. The Decline of the Office Wife and the Rise of the “Automated
Harem”
6. Could Pink-Collar Workers “Save the Labor Movement”?
7. A Feminist “Brand Called You”
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
List of Archives and Repositories
Notes
Index
Allison Elias is an assistant professor at the Darden School of Business, University of Virginia.
A best summer book of 2023: Business selection
*Financial Times*
Elias has written one of the most engaging and original accounts of
women in the workplace that I’ve ever read.
*Financial Times*
The Rise of Corporate Feminism could not be more timely. Elias
directly confronts the tension between trying to advance gender
equality while devaluing traditional women's work, fast-tracking
women college graduates into management jobs while leaving
secretaries and other clerical workers behind. She draws on
fascinating case studies to explore whether workers' rights and
women's rights can finally create more unified pathways for all
women to succeed. A marvelous book!
*Anne-Marie Slaughter, author of Unfinished Business: Women Men
Work Family*
Why has movement toward gender equity at work been so slow? Allison
Elias asks why “women’s jobs” were not merged into career paths
leading upward. Why were secretaries with the skills to be managers
kept on the sidelines? A riveting and eye-opening update of
Rosabeth Moss Kanter’s classic Men and Women of the Corporation
that should be required reading for every MBA and CEO.
*Frank Dobbin, coauthor of Getting to Diversity: What Works and
What Doesn't*
This well-crafted history details an enduring feminist tension
between individual meritocracy and working-class solidarity,
between corporate ladder climbing and labor-based equality. Allison
Elias brilliantly sets these struggles over gender equity within
the rise of corporate interests in owning the question. The Rise of
Corporate Feminism is a clear-eyed, well-researched, and greatly
needed analysis of one of the most central—and neglected—issues in
recent American history.
*Jefferson Cowie, author of Stayin’ Alive: The 1970s and the
Last Days of the Working Class*
In The Rise of Corporate Feminism, Allison Elias provides a complex
history of how corporate America bifurcated the feminist
movement—creating policies that divided women into the largely
white and educated on an upwardly mobile track and the rest
segregated into low-paying dead-end clerical jobs. This masterful
interdisciplinary study is a must-read for anyone who cares about
gender equality at work.
*Rosemary Batt, Cornell University*
In a provocative and engaging analysis of the quintessentially
“female” occupation of secretary, Elias shows how the contemporary
women’s movement and corporate efforts to respond to
anti-discrimination law unintentionally helped reinforce patterns
of gender inequality at work. This is a compelling read for anyone
interested in studying occupations, organizations, or workplace
inequality.
*Pamela S. Tolbert, coauthor of Organizations: Structure,
Process, and Outcomes*
As college-educated women moved into management, the pink-collar
jobs of their left-behind sisters sank in pay and status. In this
revelatory, unflinching book, Elias charts the failures of
corporate reform since the 1970s and shows how the past struggles
of working women for better jobs and real opportunity offer a way
forward.
*Dorothy Sue Cobble, author of For the Many: American Feminists
and the Global Fight for Democratic Equality*
Elias’s book details the labor movement’s attempts to raise
secretaries’ status and how feminism ultimately focused on getting
college-educated women out of the secretariat and into the kinds of
jobs their fathers held, leaving fewer elite women with dead-end
careers. A poignant and telling tale about the results of American
feminism’s lack of class consciousness.
*Joan Williams, author of Bias Interrupted: Creating Inclusion
for Real and For Good*
In this well-written book, Elias makes extensive use of important
archival holdings and mined oral history transcripts to good
effect. She provides a sharp and incisive analysis of how gendered
were job assignments, union organizing campaigns, and corporate
policies.
*Dennis Deslippe, author of “Rights, not Roses”: Unions and the
Rise of Working-Class Feminism*
Elias’s wide-ranging narrative examines many groups and diverse
sources to illuminate overlooked contingencies and offer new
insights on gender, work, and rights in recent decades.
*ILR Review*
[A] valuable new book.
*Administrative Science Quarterly*
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