The Home as Laboratory

The Home as Laboratory
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Finance, Housing, and Feminist Struggle
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Artikel-Nr:
9781945335204
Veröffentl:
2024
Seiten:
102
Autor:
Luci Cavallero
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

The home has become a laboratory for capital but also for forms of financial disobedience.It has become increasingly clear that home is not a site of private life and isolation, but a battleground where the conflict over the reorganization of working days, over what even counts as labor, is waged. In the very spaces that capital historically sought to portray as an unproductive and apolitical space, and refused to pay for, now emerge new forms of debt and profit extraction. Although the home has been transformed into a favored site of finances colonization of social life and of experimentation for capital, this is not a finished processor one without its resistance.The Home as Laboratory traces this story through the links between debt and financial technologies, the violence of property, and reproductive and feminized labor, and everyday forms of feminist organizing.Drawing on militant research and interventions with feminist organizers in informal settlements and renters organizations in Buenos Aires, Luci Cavallero, Vernica Gago, and Liz Mason-Deese offer a powerful feminist methodology that points to the vital space of the home as an open dispute. They critically analyze the changes that have occurred in domestic routines, in labor dynamics, in the very cuts imposed by the pandemics reorganization of the sensible and of logistics. Thus, the homeits spatiality, functioning, and dynamicssuffered from reconfigurations during these novel years of the COVID-19 pandemic that have not ended. Yet, these processes are also resisted by feminist organizations, which have put the question of debt at the forefront of alliance-building, political education, and public interventions.The Home as Laboratory provides key insights into transformations in the home leading up to and during the pandemic, showing how what was historically considered an unproductive space became a crucial laboratory for capital and new financial technologies. Luci Cavallero, Vernica Gago, and Liz Mason-Deese analyze how the home has become a site of battles over what work is considered essential, the intensification of paid and unpaid work, often at the same time, the expansion of new forms of financial extraction, and multiple and interconnected forms of violence. But, importantly, by highlighting the research and action of feminist and housing organizations, they also demonstrate how these processes are being resisted on a daily basis.

The home has become a laboratory for capital but also for forms of financial disobedience. 

It has become increasingly clear that home is not a site of private life and isolation, but a battleground where the conflict over the reorganization of working days, over what even counts as labor, is waged. In the very spaces that capital historically sought to portray as an “unproductive” and apolitical space, and refused to pay for, now emerge new forms of debt and profit extraction. Although the home has been transformed into a favored site of finance’s colonization of social life and of experimentation for capital, this is not a finished process—or one without its resistance. 

The Home as Laboratory traces this story through the links between debt and financial technologies, the violence of property, and reproductive and feminized labor, and everyday forms of feminist organizing. Drawing on militant research and interventions with feminist organizers in informal settlements and renters’ organizations in Buenos Aires, Luci Cavallero, Verónica Gago, and Liz Mason-Deese offer a powerful feminist methodology that points to the vital space of the home as an open dispute. They critically analyze the changes that have occurred in domestic routines, in labor dynamics, in the very cuts imposed by the pandemic’s reorganization of the sensible and of logistics. Thus, the home—its spatiality, functioning, and dynamics—suffered from reconfigurations during these novel years of the COVID-19 pandemic that have not ended. Yet, these processes are also resisted by feminist organizations, which have put the question of debt at the forefront of alliance-building, political education, and public interventions. 

The Home as Laboratory provides key insights into transformations in the home leading up to and during the pandemic, showing how what was historically considered an “unproductive space” became a crucial laboratory for capital and new financial technologies. Luci Cavallero, Verónica Gago, and Liz Mason-Deese analyze how the home has become a site of battles over what work is considered essential, the intensification of paid and unpaid work, often at the same time, the expansion of new forms of financial extraction, and multiple and interconnected forms of violence. But, importantly, by highlighting the research and action of feminist and housing organizations, they also demonstrate how these processes are being resisted on a daily basis.

1. The Home as Laboratory

Introduction
Debt in the Center
The Domestic in Dispute
Essentialness and Remuneration: Separate Issues
The Factory-Home
The Indebted Home
Feminist Assembly of Villa 31 y 31 Bis
House Titling Based on Debts
Reinforcing the Family and Gender Mandates through Property Titles
#StayAtHome
The Consolidation of a Subject of Struggle: Renters
The Home as a Laboratory of Capital
Conclusions

2. Counter-Cartographies of Domestic Territories

Feminist Counter-Mapping as Method
Understanding Geographies of Social Reproduction
The Home Spills Over
Mapping Lines of Struggle

3. Postscript on the Emergency Society

Logic of the Emergency
Discipline, Control, and Pandemic
Program

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