Part I: Motherhood, Work, and Resistance
Chapter One: “Package Labeled Colored”: Reading Race, Gender, and Labor in Ann Petry’s The Street
Namrata Dey Roy
Chapter Two: Invisible Labor, Partnership, and Resistance: Staging Women’s Undervalued Work
Lynn Deboeck
Part II: Poetic Representations of Working Women
Chapter Three: “Eschew[Ing] The Polaroid Instant”: The Depiction of Women Workers in Natasha Trethewey’s Domestic Work and Bellocq’s Ophelia
Jill Goad
Chapter Four: Memory at Work: Docupoetry and the Mnemonic Labor of Women
Samantha Allan
Chapter Five: Decoration as a Form of Self-Care: Reading Gwendolyn Brooks’s Black Female Domestic Workers
Alicia Ye Sul Oh
Part III: Immigrant Working Women in Metropolitans
Chapter Six: Cutting and Contriving: Ulene Payne in Paule Marshall’s Novel The Fisher King
Margaret E. Salifu
Chapter Seven: Wife, Woman, and Breadwinner: Nazneen Ahmed’s Journey in a Foreign Land
M. Anjum Khan
Part IV: Visual Representation of Working Women
Chapter Eight: (In)Visible Bodies: The Corporeal Representations of Working Women in Early 21st-Century American Primetime Drama
Emilia Nodżak
Chapter Nine: Working Black Women and the Performance of Racial Uplift in the Netflix Series Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walker
Hatice Bay
Chapter Ten: Clocking in and Clocking out: Roseanne and the Politics of Gendered Work in Its First Season
Peter Piatkowski