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Pluto Press Paperback English

The Backstage of the Care Economy

Transnational Perspectives on the Commercialisation of Care

By Helma Lutz

Regular price £24.99
Unit price
per

Pluto Press Paperback English

The Backstage of the Care Economy

Transnational Perspectives on the Commercialisation of Care

By Helma Lutz

Regular price £24.99
Unit price
per
 
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  • What is it like to care for another family while yours remains in a different country? In today's capitalist society, migrant women performing care work in private households experience the painful tension of caring for both, often under precarious conditions. Characterized as the 'backstage' family, the carer's remote relationship with their loved ones at home is often purely digital, a stark reminder of the isolation and emotional toll of their work. The double dilemmas of migrant motherhood and stay-behind fathers expose the pitfalls of transnational employment relations and the growth of social inequality. Here, Helma Lutz explores the debates around this issue, focusing on carers from Eastern Europe working in the West. She unpacks questions around feminist critiques of capitalism and the commodification of emotional labor, exploring how gender justice and the search for socialist feminist utopias can shape how we see a future - not only for the improvement of the carers’ working and living conditions but also for a new way of dealing with care work.
What is it like to care for another family while yours remains in a different country? In today's capitalist society, migrant women performing care work in private households experience the painful tension of caring for both, often under precarious conditions. Characterized as the 'backstage' family, the carer's remote relationship with their loved ones at home is often purely digital, a stark reminder of the isolation and emotional toll of their work. The double dilemmas of migrant motherhood and stay-behind fathers expose the pitfalls of transnational employment relations and the growth of social inequality. Here, Helma Lutz explores the debates around this issue, focusing on carers from Eastern Europe working in the West. She unpacks questions around feminist critiques of capitalism and the commodification of emotional labor, exploring how gender justice and the search for socialist feminist utopias can shape how we see a future - not only for the improvement of the carers’ working and living conditions but also for a new way of dealing with care work.