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***Winner of an English PEN Award 2021*** In this sharp
intervention, authors Luci Cavallero and Veronica Gago defiantly
develop a feminist understanding of debt, showing its impact on
women and members of the LGBTQ+ community and examining the
relationship between debt and social reproduction. Exploring the
link between financial activity and the rise of conservative forces
in Latin America, the book demonstrates that debt is intimately
linked to gendered violence and patriarchal notions of the family.
Yet, rather than seeing these forces as insurmountable, the authors
also show ways in which debt can be resisted, drawing on concrete
experiences and practices from Latin America and around the world.
Featuring interviews with women in Argentina and Brazil, the book
reveals the real-life impact of debt and how it falls mainly on the
shoulders of women, from the household to the wider effects of
national debt and austerity. However, through discussions around
experiences of work, prisons, domestic labour, agriculture, family,
abortion and housing, a narrative of resistance emerges. Translated
by Liz Mason-Deese.
“Dalla Costa shows that with the New Deal, the state began to
plan the ‘social factory’—that is, the home, the family, the
school, and above all women’s labor, on which the productivity
and pacification of industrial relations was made to
rest.”—Silvia Federici In a groundbreaking study, Family,
Welfare, and the State offers a comprehensive reading of the
welfare system through the dynamics of women's resistance and class
struggle. Mariarosa Dalla Costa, a key figure in the International
Wages for Housework campaigns, highlights how the New Deal
concretized the central role of women and the family in ensuring
the capacity for economic growth and the reproduction of labor
power necessary for the maintenance of capitalism. As social
movements fight for and secure government relief for mass
unemployment in a way not seen for decades, it is essential to
understand how the deals—especially governing race, class, and
family relations—struck by earlier generations of activists have
shaped our world. A new foreword makes clear Dalla Costa’s
importance to understanding the functioning of social reproduction
in a world ravaged by COVID-19.
In Neoliberalism from Below-first published in Argentina in
2014-Veronica Gago examines how Latin American neoliberalism is
propelled not just from above by international finance,
corporations, and government, but also by the activities of migrant
workers, vendors, sweatshop workers, and other marginalized groups.
Using the massive illegal market La Salada in Buenos Aires as a
point of departure, Gago shows how alternative economic practices,
such as the sale of counterfeit goods produced in illegal textile
factories, resist neoliberalism while simultaneously succumbing to
its models of exploitative labor and production. Gago demonstrates
how La Salada's economic dynamics mirror those found throughout
urban Latin America. In so doing, she provides a new theory of
neoliberalism and a nuanced view of the tense mix of calculation
and freedom, obedience and resistance, individualism and community,
and legality and illegality that fuels the increasingly powerful
popular economies of the global South's large cities.
The political response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the pressures
on the global capitalist economies has, once again, imposed the
priority of markets over life. Add to this the climate crisis and,
undoubtedly, the task of sustaining life continues to be
privatized, made invisible, and feminized. We must ask: what does a
dignified life look like, especially one that transforms the
gendered labor divisions and a racialized, exploitative feminized
care economy that falls mainly on the shoulders of women-from the
household to the wider effects of the capitalist economy on social
reproduction. At the same time, these questions are intimately
connected with considerations of our environment. The Feminist
Subversion of the Economy makes the conection between patriarchy,
capitalism, and ecological crisis-and rallies women, the LGBTQ+
community, and movements worldwide to center gender and social
reproduction in a vision for a just ecology and economy. Public
intellectual, academic, and activist Amaia Perez Orozco offers a
vision beyond the myths of development (unlimited growth), wealth
(accumulation of capital), and work (limited to waged labor) and,
at the same time, accounts for the tasks, networks, and economic
subjects that, materially and daily, guarantee that life keeps
going. Newly translated and updated in collaboration with Liz
Mason-Desse, who has won a PEN translation award for her work on
feminist economics, The Feminist Subversion of the Economy shows
the urgent need to radically and democratically discuss what we
mean by a dignified life and how we can organize to sustain life
collectively.
In Neoliberalism from Below—first published in Argentina in
2014—Verónica Gago examines how Latin American neoliberalism is
propelled not just from above by international finance,
corporations, and government, but also by the activities of migrant
workers, vendors, sweatshop workers, and other marginalized groups.
Using the massive illegal market La Salada in Buenos Aires as a
point of departure, Gago shows how alternative economic practices,
such as the sale of counterfeit goods produced in illegal textile
factories, resist neoliberalism while simultaneously succumbing to
its models of exploitative labor and production. Gago demonstrates
how La Salada's economic dynamics mirror those found
throughout urban Latin America. In so doing, she provides a new
theory of neoliberalism and a nuanced view of the tense mix of
calculation and freedom, obedience and resistance, individualism
and community, and legality and illegality that fuels the
increasingly powerful popular economies of the global South's large
cities.
***Winner of an English PEN Award 2021*** In this sharp
intervention, authors Luci Cavallero and Veronica Gago defiantly
develop a feminist understanding of debt, showing its impact on
women and members of the LGBTQ+ community and examining the
relationship between debt and social reproduction. Exploring the
link between financial activity and the rise of conservative forces
in Latin America, the book demonstrates that debt is intimately
linked to gendered violence and patriarchal notions of the family.
Yet, rather than seeing these forces as insurmountable, the authors
also show ways in which debt can be resisted, drawing on concrete
experiences and practices from Latin America and around the world.
Featuring interviews with women in Argentina and Brazil, the book
reveals the real-life impact of debt and how it falls mainly on the
shoulders of women, from the household to the wider effects of
national debt and austerity. However, through discussions around
experiences of work, prisons, domestic labour, agriculture, family,
abortion and housing, a narrative of resistance emerges. Translated
by Liz Mason-Deese.
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