Lisa Duggan,
"(Re)Producing Social Justice After Neoliberalism"
(page 2 of 3)
Why social reproduction? Why now? The term has some very
clear limits, as does its historical context, English language
socialist feminism. It is associated with the goal of establishing
a unitary theory, within a broadly pre-poststructuralist Marxist
project, tied to the historically gendered categories of
production/reproduction. It is embedded in socialist feminism's
often Euro-American centered politics, with a focus on class and
gender that woefully excludes attention to the dynamics of race,
sexuality, and religion. Historically, the roots of the terminology
emerge from a moment before women of color feminism and queer and
transnational politics had transformed our collective political
horizons. Other potentially derailing blind spots include an
emphasis on the social that can be interpreted to exclude the
cultural, and a focus on social science rather than the
interdisciplinary humanities. For all these reasons and more, it
seems like a weak conceptual anchor for an analysis that might cope
with the demands of global politics.[4]
In order to make a case for the continued usefulness of the term
social reproduction, despite these clear historical limits,
it is useful to examine some definitions. Barbara Laslett and
Johanna Brenner's 1989 definition is frequently cited:
[F]eminists use social reproduction to refer
to the activities and attitudes, behaviors and emotions,
responsibilities and relationships directly involved in the
maintenance of life on a daily basis, and intergenerationally.
Among other things, social reproduction includes how food,
clothing and shelter are made available for immediate consumption,
the ways in which the care and socialization of children are
provided, the care of the infirm and the elderly, and the social
organization of sexuality. Social reproduction can thus be
seen to include various kinds of work—mental, manual,
emotional—aimed at providing the historically and socially, as well
as biologically defined care necessary to maintain life and to
reproduce the next generation.[5]
This definition embraces a wide range of practices, processes,
institutions and industries, allowing linkages across the domains of
the economic, political, social and cultural. More recently, other
writers have worked to tie this concept of social
reproduction to the historically specific operations of global
capitalism. Isabella Bakker and Stephen Gill of York University in
Toronto edited a 2003 collection designed to foreground the
contemporary processes linked to neoliberalism: the privatization of
social reproduction and the intensification of exploitation.
Drawing from a 2003 conference, "Feminist Political Economy in
Canada and the Politics of Social Reproduction, " also at York, Kate
Bezanson and Meg Luxton produced an edited volume highlighting the
specific impact of neoliberal privatization—the imposition of
responsibility for social reproduction on private households,
where labor is unpaid or purchased, resulting in growing
inequalities of gender, race and class. In her 2006 book Gender,
the State and Social Reproduction: Household Insecurity in
Neo-Liberal Times, Bezanson went on to argue that social
reproduction is a primary site of contestation in a neoliberal
era.[6]
This work challenges the conventional formulations of liberal
feminism and left political economy, using the concept of social
reproduction to forge links across categories and domains. It
also, directly or indirectly, critically engages the Althusserian
conception of ideological state apparatuses, and Gramscian notions
of hegemony. Other recent scholarship takes social
reproduction into the further reaches of engagement with
globalization studies, critical geography, and queer studies, and
engages the theories of Pierre Bourdieu and Michel Foucault. Cindi
Katz's 2004 comparative study of the lives of children in
globalizing Africa and the U.S., Growing Up Global: Economic
Restructuring and Children's Everyday Lives, offers a definition
that encompasses a wide spectrum of interdisciplinary concerns and
preoccupations:
Social reproduction . . . encompasses that broad range of
practices and social relations that maintain and reproduce
particular relations of production along with the material social
grounds in which they take place. It is as much about the fleshy,
messy indeterminate stuff of everyday life as it is a set of
structural practices that unfold in dialectical relation to
production, with which it is mutually constitutive and in
tension . . ..
. . . [S]ocial reproduction embodies the whole jumble
of cultural forms and practices that institute and create everyday
life and the meanings by which people understand themselves in the
world. It is interesting and important, then, as the arena wherein
which the future is shaped, the conditions of production are both
made and naturalized, through an amalgam of material social
practices associated with the household, the state, civil society,
the market, and the workplace. Yet social reproduction is a
critical practice in the sense that Henri Lefebvre understood
everyday life. The possibilities for rupture are everywhere in the
routine. If in the efflorescence of cultural forms and practices
that make up social reproduction hegemony is secured, so,
too, might it stumble.
[emphasis added][7]
Katz goes on to emphasize the blurred boundaries between
political economy, social reproduction and cultural life,
including the media, mass culture, and religion.
There's no reason to fetishize the term social
reproduction per se, however. There are other terms that
reference a similar conceptual universe. Neither M. Jacqui
Alexander's examination of morality and the state in Trinidad, nor
Lisa Lowe's analysis of immigration policy in relation to cultural
production, for instance, employ the term social
reproduction. Yet both focus on the broad complex
interrelations of the categories of political thought that remain
sundered in more conventional scholarship and politics. Both also
centrally engage categories of race and sexuality in more expansive
ways than the previously cited work. Other new scholarship on
globalizing care chains, transnational adoption, and indigenous
resistance to structural adjustment policies also centrally analyze
processes of social reproduction in the context of global political
economy, though these scholars do not generally employ the term
itself.[8]
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