Becoming Kalgoorlie : gold mining, brothels, and ‘skimpie’ bars


Autoria(s): Mayes, Robyn; Pini, Barbara; Boyer, Kate
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

On our first day in Kalgoorlie, a local woman in her mid-thirties tells us that ‘Kal wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for mining and prostitution’. In the ensuing days many others would tell us the same thing. More explicitly, in the words of another local resident, ‘The town was founded on brothels. [Without them] the men wouldn’t have been happy and they wouldn’t have got as much gold.’ These two phenomena – mining and prostitution – and their seemingly natural and straightforward connection to each other are also routinely invoked in tourist and popular culture depictions of Kalgoorlie. The Lonely Planet, for example, notes that ‘historically, mineworkers would come straight to town to spend disposable income at Kalgoorlie’s infamous brothels, or at pubs staffed by “skimpies” (scantily clad female bar staff)’.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/82073/

Publicador

Text Publishing Company

Relação

https://griffithreview.com/articles/becoming-kalgoorlie/

Mayes, Robyn, Pini, Barbara, & Boyer, Kate (2015) Becoming Kalgoorlie : gold mining, brothels, and ‘skimpie’ bars. Griffith Review, 47.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 [please consult the author]

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #160800 SOCIOLOGY #Kalgoorlie #Gold Mining #Brothels
Tipo

Journal Article