North Country Movie Analysis

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In North Country, there were many stereotypes relating to gender roles and what is appropriate for each gender in the workforce. When Josey’s friend, Glory, tells her that she works at the mine, Josey playfully asks if she is a secretary there. Glory explains that she drives a truck and that she was one of the first women to work there. Josey thinks that it is weird that she works in a man’s position. After considering the possibility of working at the mine because she needs the money, she tells her parents. Her dad asks if she is a lesbian since she was thinking of working in a man’s job. Then Josey’s mother explains that her dad’s purpose is the mine (his job), and her purpose is to care for her kids. By taking a man’s job at the mine, …show more content…

The stereotyping created misconceptions of the women such as being lesbians and slutty women because a woman’s place should be running the home. The men at the mine were threatened by women taking their jobs, which led to a brotherhood to unite and create hell for the female employees. They believed the women were taking jobs when there was not any to take, and they had no business being there. Based on their cognizant and subconscious thoughts, the male workers, from the CEO down, retaliated to the perceived threat by allowing the females to be treated as sexual objects, subjected to derogatory comments, and threatened with repulsive pranks. This led to an extremely hostile working environment that ignored sexual misconduct, and the men bonded together in hopes that the women would quit so they could get their jobs …show more content…

Examples of this type of sexual harassment include: unnecessary physical contact, discussing sexual activities, comments on a woman’s body or appearance, swearing and dirty jokes as well as visual displays such as pictures, and favoritism” (Carr-Ruffino, 2015). One example of this type is when Josey’s manager mentions the doctor says that you look good under those clothes. The male workers used crude language, several vile pranks, and unnecessary touching such as reaching into a female worker’s pocket for a cigarette. They were called offensive names and “my girls,” and subjected to inappropriate calendars on the wall, and derogatory and offensive words smeared in feces on the walls of the women’s locker room. In addition, the men made several comments about their bodies, and Bobby let them know they did not want

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