Casino Women: Courage in Unexpected Places

Casino Women: Courage in Unexpected Places

Casino Women: Courage in Unexpected Places

Casino Women: Courage in Unexpected Places

Hardcover

$130.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Casino Women is a pioneering look at the female face of corporate gaming. Based on extended interviews with maids, cocktail waitresses, cooks, laundry workers, dealers, pit bosses, managers, and vice presidents, the book describes in compelling detail a world whose enormous profitability is dependent on the labor of women assigned stereotypically female occupations—making beds and serving food on the one hand and providing sexual allure on the other. But behind the neon lies another world, peopled by thousands of remarkable women who assert their humanity in the face of gaming empires' relentless quest for profits.The casino women profiled here generally fall into two groups. Geoconda Arguello Kline, typical of the first, arrived in the United States in the 1980s fleeing the war in Nicaragua. Finding work as a Las Vegas hotel maid, she overcame her initial fear of organizing and joined with others to build the preeminent grassroots union in the nation—the 60,000-member Culinary Union—becoming in time its president. In Las Vegas, "the hottest union city in America," the collective actions of union activists have won economic and political power for tens of thousands of working Nevadans and their families. The story of these women's transformation and their success in creating a union able to face off against global gaming giants form the centerpiece of this book.Another group of women, dealers and middle managers among them, did not act. Fearful of losing their jobs, they remained silent, declining to speak out when others were abused, and in the case of middle managers, taking on the corporations' goals as their own. Susan Chandler and Jill B. Jones appraise the cost of their silence and examine the factors that pushed some women into activism and led others to accept the status quo.Casino Women will appeal to all readers interested in women, gambling, and working-class life, and in how ordinary people stand up to corporate actors who appear to hold all the cards.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801450143
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2011
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Susan Chandler is Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Nevada, Reno. Jill B. Jones is Associate Professor of Social Work, Emeritus, at the University of Nevada, Reno.

Read an Excerpt

Click to read or download

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments1. "You Have to Do It for the People Coming"Part I: Back of the House, Front of the House2. "They're Treating Us Like Donkeys, Really": Housekeeping and Other Back of the House Work3. "Kiss My Foot": Cocktail WaitressingPart II: Union Women4. "I'll Always Love the Union"5. "Here's My Heart"Part III: Nonunion Women Stand Up6. Darlene Jespersen v. Harrah’s Entertainment, Inc.7. Liberation Theology, Pit Boss StylePart IV: Dealers: The Illusion of Power8. Dealing: The View from Dead Center9. Stuck10. Big Tobacco Rides the StripPart V: Women in Management11. Crossing Over to the Other Side12. Conclusion: "A Marvelous Victory"Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Dorothy Sue Cobble

Casino Women is an absorbing journey into the heart of Nevada's gaming empire and a triumphant tale of how women on the front lines of service work took on some of the world's largest corporations and won. Anyone who cares about the indignities and injustices faced by working people today and wants to know how we can change the casino capitalist world in which we all live should read this inspiring book.

John W. Wilhelm

Casino Women illuminates the often overlooked contributions of women both to the gaming industry and to the labor movement. Relying on the voices of women who have built the union and the industry in Nevada, Susan Chandler and Jill B. Jones have crafted an important account of work on the struggle for democracy in postindustrial America.

Annelise Orleck

Casino Women is profound and revealing. Susan Chandler and Jill B. Jones offer fresh and vivid insights into the daily lives of women in the casino industry, giving readers a multilayered sense of their motivations, thought processes, feelings, frailties, and addictions. It is somewhat of a stereotype—the world-weary-but-wise bartender, blackjack dealer, croupier. And yet, the people in this book do seem to have a remarkable degree of self-awareness, a keen ability to analyze their situations in larger context, recognition of the joys and traps in the work they do—jobs that are sometimes exciting and sometimes relatively well paid, but often physically battering and soul-sapping. This book contains both haunting and inspiring characterizations that humanize by digging beneath the glossy, clamorous, smoky surface of commercial gambling establishments to the complex, often tragic effects of that environment on people's lives.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews