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“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.
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