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100 _aWinders, Jamie
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245 _aSocial reproduction and capitalist production: A genealogy of dominant imaginaries/
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 43, issue 5, 2019 : (871-889 p.).
520 _aThis article offers a critical genealogy of the dominant imaginaries through which social reproduction, particularly in relation to capitalist production, has been examined in key feminist literatures since the 1960s. Feminist scholars have long observed that the distinction between production and social reproduction in capitalist societies manifests as an opposition between ‘work’ and ‘home,’ but they have implicitly envisioned and interpreted that opposition in diverse ways that crucially connect with geography. We offer this analysis in order to clarify how different imaginaries embedded in and shaping approaches to social reproduction both illuminate and occlude the social reproduction-production nexus. Although this critical genealogy leaves us better prepared to address conceptual shortcomings within different understandings of this nexus, we still lack an approach that grasps the complex workings of this interface in a moment of rising precarité across the globe.
650 _adomestic labor,
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650 _a feminist geography,
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650 _aproduction,
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650 _asocial reproduction,
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650 _a work
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700 _aSmith, Barbara Ellen
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773 0 _012579
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_dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
_tProgress in human geography/
_x 03091325
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0309132518791730
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c12633
_d12633