Goodreads helps you follow your favorite authors. Be the first to learn about new releases!
Start by following Jeanne Boydston.

Jeanne Boydston Jeanne Boydston > Quotes

 

 (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)
Showing 1-2 of 2
“The distinction between "paid labor" and "housework" implied in working-class men's yearning for the domestic ideal persisted in later-nineteenth-century analyses of women's unpaid labor and was eventually replicated in Capital. Because wives' work was laregely unpaid, and because husbands came to the marketplace as the "possessors" of their wives' labor, Marx did not address the role of housework in the labor exchange that led to surplus value. Neither did he attend to the dynamics that permitted the husband to lay claim, in the price of his own labor, to the value of his wife's work.”
Jeanne Boydston
“Historians have generally described the coming of industrialization in terms of changes in paid work. The transformation has been framed as one from a community of comparatively independent producers to a class of wage workers.”
Jeanne Boydston

All Quotes | Add A Quote
Home and Work: Housework, Wages, and the Ideology of Labor in the Early Republic Home and Work
82 ratings
Open Preview
Making a Nation: The United States and Its People Making a Nation
4 ratings
Making a Nation: The United States and Its People Making a Nation
3 ratings