Queer Career
Sexuality and Work in Modern America
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Narrated by:
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Laurel Lefkow
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Written by:
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Margot Canaday
About this listen
This audiobook narrated by Laurel Lefkow provides a masterful history of the LGBT workforce in America
Workplaces have traditionally been viewed as “straight spaces” in which queer people passed. As a result, historians have directed limited attention to the experiences of queer people on the job. Queer Career rectifies this, offering an expansive historical look at sexual minorities in the modern American workforce. Arguing that queer workers were more visible than hidden and, against the backdrop of state aggression, vulnerable to employer exploitation, Margot Canaday positions employment and fear of job loss as central to gay life in postwar America.
Rather than finding that many midcentury employers tried to root out gay employees, Canaday sees an early version of “don’t ask / don’t tell”: in all kinds of work, as long as queer workers were discreet, they were valued for the lower wages they could be paid, their contingency, their perceived lack of familial ties, and the ease with which they could be pulled in and pushed out of the labor market. Across the socioeconomic spectrum, they were harbingers of post-Fordist employment regimes we now associate with precarity. While progress was not linear, by century’s end some gay workers rejected their former discretion, and some employers eventually offered them protection unattained through law. Pushed by activists at the corporate grass roots, business emerged at the forefront of employment rights for sexual minorities. It did so, at least in part, in response to the way that queer workers aligned with, and even prefigured, the labor system of late capitalism.
Queer Career shows how LGBT history helps us understand the recent history of capitalism and labor and rewrites our understanding of the queer past.
©2023 Margot Canaday (P)2023 Princeton University PressWhat the critics say
“With deep insight and expansive vision, Margot Canaday charts a history of queer vulnerability in the workforce and reveals the big-picture significance of queer labor for post-Fordist capitalism. This book is full of powerful ideas, and the voices of Canaday’s oral history narrators give it great heart.”—Regina Kunzel, author of Criminal Intimacy: Prison and the Uneven History of Modern American Sexuality
“Margot Canaday brings sexuality into the history of capitalism with dazzling results. Deeply researched and deftly narrated, Queer Career abounds with startling discoveries, vivid stories, and singular insights—not least into how the enduring vulnerability of lesbians and gay men prefigured the precarity now affecting most workers, whatever their sexual orientation. A masterful work of scholarship and a richly rewarding read.”—Nancy MacLean, author of Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America
“This beautifully written, deeply sophisticated, and pathbreaking book unearths an entirely new body of evidence that captures the workplace experiences of a generation of gay and lesbian Americans whose stories have never been told while making crucial interventions in sociolegal history, the history of gender and sexuality, and the history of capitalism. A tremendous contribution and true tour de force.”—Serena Mayeri, author of Reasoning from Race: Feminism, Law, and the Civil Rights Revolution