More Smiles, More Money? The Politics of Making Housework Visible
Louise Toupin’s Wages for Housework: A History of an International Feminist Movement, 1972–77 arrives as both an archival excavation and a provocation, as an invitation to re-enter a field of struggle whose coordinates feel uncannily contemporary. What Toupin reconstructs is not merely a campaign organized around a contentious demand, but a political experiment that sought to recompose the very terms through which labour, value, and subjectivity are understood. In this sense, the book operates in a register that is at once historiographic and strategic: it is concerned not only with what happened, but with what remains possible. At the centre of this reconstruction lies a deceptively simple gesture: to take seriously the proposition that housework – long dismissed as natural, private, or pre-political – is in fact “multi-faceted, invisible, and unrecognized labour” that is indispensable to capitalist accumulation. From this starting point, the Wages for Housework current unfolds less a...