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On the question of cheap care: Regarding A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things by Raj Patel and Jason W Moore
Author(s)
Date Issued
2019-03-11
Date Available
2024-06-18T11:41:41Z
Abstract
One of the most engaging claims of Patel and Moore’s book is that abstract ideas have played a powerful role legitimating the exploitation of swathes of humanity, through distinguishing ontologically and epistemologically between nature and society. As most women, and indigenous people, were defined as part of nature, their labours and lives, including their care labour, were deemed to be part of nature and thereby legitimately exploitable. The authors claim that the cheapening of care arose from the separation of spheres between care work and paid work, between home and the economy, arising from the development of enclosures and the demise of the commons. What the book does not address, however, is how the exploitation of women’s domestic and care labour was not only beneficial to capitalism: men of all classes were and are beneficiaries of women’s unpaid care labour. The authors also suggest that the primary purpose of caring is to reproduce people for capitalism. But caring is not undertaken simply at the behest of capitalism. Nurturing and caring for others are defining features of humanity given the lengthy dependency of humans at birth and at times of vulnerability. The logic of care is very different to market logic.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Sage
Journal
Irish Journal of Sociology
Volume
27
Issue
2
Start Page
200
End Page
207
Copyright (Published Version)
2019 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0791-6035
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Lynch and Crean 2019 Proofs On Cheap Care.pdf
Size
117.05 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
3e5d90dd499859f96463d472d1b430b4
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