Trabalhadoras domésticas e suas filhas: um estudo sobre as percepções de mobilidade social em duas gerações
Abstract
This work aims to understand the perceptions of social mobility of two generations from
popular class families. The participants of the research were domestic workers who migrated
between the late 1960s and the mid-1990s to the Southeast of the country and their daughters
inserted in the context of the 2010s and 2020s. We tried to access mothers’ and daughters’
perceptions about their strategies to break with a particular social situation of origin. In the case
of mothers, the hypothesis is that they found in domestic employment an alternative to break
with a routine of hard and precarious work in the plantations. In the case of daughters, we tried
to investigate how elongated schooling allowed the access to other professions different of their
mothers' occupation. In this sense, we take into consideration the creation of public policies for
education, especially the expansion of access to higher education between the decade of 2000
and 2010. Considering the transformations in domestic work between two generations from
working class families, the objective of this study is to understand the relationships among
migration, generation, gender, and social mobility in contemporary Brazil. Through the method
of life stories, trajectories, and narratives, we sought to access the perceptions and meanings
attributed by the participants of this research to their mobility experiences.
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