Broad History
In the 1970s, Wages for Housework demanded pay for cooking and cleaning without any illusions about making it in the workplace. What if work was never our liberator? On this episode: * Isabelle Roughol - Host * Emily Callaci - Guest Listen early and without ads. Become a member at www.broadhistory.com. ★ Support this podcast ★ [https://www.broadhistory.com/membership] 🇬🇧 Buy the book in the UK: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/9178/9780241502907 🇺🇸 Buy the book in the US: https://bookshop.org/a/79408/9781541603516 (Affiliate bookshop.org links support Broad History and indie bookstores.) Click here to watch a video of this episode. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KCuMBGdva3Q] Click here to view the episode transcript. [https://share.transistor.fm/s/4ad852fc/transcript] Chapters: * (00:00) - 03 Wages for Housework (Emily Callaci) * (01:31) - Addressing housework in the women's right struggle * (02:50) - Two workers for the price of one * (04:00) - "All work is shit" * (07:51) - Not wages for housewives * (10:43) - Biographies of 5 campaign leaders * (11:20) - Selma James * (13:48) - Mariarosa Dalla Costa * (15:38) - Silvia Federici * (17:49) - Wilmette Brown * (19:58) - Margaret Prescott * (22:21) - Welfare * (26:53) - How far did the movement go? * (29:32) - The care work of the climate crisis * (32:39) - How housework got remarketed as care work * (36:48) - How the campaign ended * (38:45) - The long tail legacy of Wages for Housework
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