The work, education, and health concerns of Canada`s increasing
population of fisherwomen--rural women who work on inshore fishing boats
to supplant family income lost to fish plant closures--are profiled in
this study of how women`s work in previously male-dominated trades
impact their identity and autonomy. Narratives from fisherwomen and
statistics about the fishing workforce inform this gender analysis of
how vocational restructuring challenges traditional patriarchal codes.
The complex joys, struggles, and dangers that fisherwomen encounter shed
light on this sociological transition.