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Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale

Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale

Maria Mies

Zed Books

2014

9781783601691

Softcover

22 x 14 x 3

250 pages

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Women in the International Division of Labour With a Foreword by Silvia Federici 'It is my thesis that this general production of life, or subsistence production - mainly performed through the non-wage labour of women and other non-wage labourers as slaves, contract workers and peasants in the colonies - constitutes the perennial basis upon which "capitalist productive labour" can be built up and exploited.' First published in 1986, Maria Mies’s progressive book was hailed as a major paradigm shift for feminist theory, and it remains a major contribution to development theory and practice today. Tracing the social origins of the sexual division of labour, it offers a history of the related processes of colonization and 'housewifization' and extends this analysis to the contemporary new international division of labour. Mies's theory of capitalist patriarchy has become even more relevant today. Maria Mies is a Marxist feminist scholar who is renowned for her theory of capitalist patriarchy, which recognizes third world women and difference. She is a professor of sociology at Cologne University of Applied Sciences, but retired from teaching in 1993. Since the late 1960s she has been involved with feminist activism. In 1979, at the Institute of Social Studies in The Hague, she founded the Women and Development programme. Her other titles published by Zed include The Lace Makers of Narsapur (1982), Women: The Last Colony (1988), The Subsistence Perspective (1999) and Ecofeminism (2014). Table of Contents:
  • Foreword by Silvia Federici
  • Preface to the critique influence change edition
  • Introduction
  • 1. What is Feminism?
  • 2. Social Origins of the Sexual Division of Labour
  • 3. Colonization and Housewifization
  • 4. Housewifization International: Women and the International Division of Labour
  • 5. Violence Against Women and the Ongoing Primitive Accumulation of Capital
  • 6. National Liberation and Women's Liberation
  • 7. Towards a Feminist Perspective of a New Society
 
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