Wildcat Women
200 pages, 6 x 9
25 halftones, 2 maps
Paperback
Release Date:15 Aug 2018
ISBN:9781602233546
CA$29.95 Back Order
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Wildcat Women

Narratives of Women Breaking Ground in Alaska's Oil and Gas Industry

University of Alaska Press
Subzero temperatures, whiteout blizzards, and even the lack of restrooms didn’t deter them. Nor did sneers, harassment, and threats. Wildcat Women is the first book to document the life and labor of pioneering women in the oil fields of Alaska’s North Slope. It profiles fourteen women who worked in the fields, telling a little-known history of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. These trailblazers conquered their fears to face hazardous working and living conditions, performing and excelling at “a man’s job in a man’s world.” They faced down challenges on and off the job: they drove buses over ice roads through snowstorms; wrestled with massive pipes; and operated dangerous valves that put their lives literally in their hands; they also fought union hall red tape, challenged discriminatory practices, and fought for equal pay—and sometimes won. The women talk about the roads that brought them to this unusual career, where they often gave up comfort and convenience and felt isolated and alienated. They also tell of the lifelong friendships and sense of family that bonded these unlikely wildcats. The physical and emotional hardship detailed in these stories exemplifies their courage, tenacity, resilience, and leadership, and shows how their fight for recognition and respect benefited woman workers everywhere.
(Williams) shares the stories of more than a dozen women who walked the same path. The result is a book that lends readers a sense of what it was like to be there during the most tumultuous cultural and economic shift in the state’s history, from the perspective of those who were making their own history, even if they weren’t particularly aware of it at the time. Daily News-Miner
Gives an insider's glimpse of working as a woman in Alaska's oil-fields during the TransAlaska Pipeline days in the 1970s, ’80s, and beyond. . . . This was a unique time in American labor history, creating a modern pioneer woman. The Village View
Carla Williams documents the experiences of fourteen women who worked in nontraditional jobs on the North Slope of Alaska from the early 1960s through 2015. Alaska History
Carla Williams spent most of her career working in the Alaska oil and gas industry in Anchorage and the North Slope.
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