AUB ScholarWorks

Social Reproduction in the Periphery: (Re)Producing Life in Lebanon

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Wick, Livia Celine
dc.contributor.author Vestergaard, Karen Ravn
dc.date.accessioned 2020-09-22T14:22:55Z
dc.date.available 2020-09-22T14:22:55Z
dc.date.issued 9/22/2020
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/21949
dc.description Nadya Jeanne Sbaiti Samer Frangie
dc.description.abstract Throughout different historical eras, women migrant domestic workers have been employed into private Lebanese households for at least a century to carry out daily care and housework for little (or no) pay. In this thesis, I seek to explore that situation through a critical analysis of the organization of domestic labor in Lebanon. Based on the Marxist-Feminist analytical concept of social reproduction, I analyze the modern configurations of domestic labor in households as constituted by larger market structures, and as positioned within social relations of (re)production on a local, regional and global scale. Accordingly, the analysis will examine the broader organization of “social reproduction” in Lebanon, meaning those processes and forms of labor needed for the daily and regenerative (re)production of life and labor power. This thesis seeks to display that in the social and colonial formation of modern Lebanon, the centering of financial and trade interests in the political economy has simultaneously pushed the processes of social reproduction to a peripheral position with crucial consequences for the majority popular classes and social relations of (re)production. Such processes are visible through the long-lasting privatization of social welfare, in legislations on labor and family relations, (non-)citizenship laws, housing conditions, and in unequal access to reproductive autonomy and means of subsistence, particularly for women and those deemed non-citizens. It is shown that Lebanon as a financialized capitalist society, like elsewhere, results in an organization of social reproduction and domestic labor as both feminized, racialized, and either privatized or commodified. Hence, reproductive processes become a contested field of survival, dependent on people’s structural position with regards to class, gender, citizenship, race, and sexuality, while enabling the political establishment to utilize social reproduction as a means to subordinate and gain political support. By demonstrating the connections between global and local structures of feminized domestic labor, I show that such a configuration is co-constitutive of a large global labor force of temporarily employed (migrant) workers whose reproductive autonomy become significantly reduced to cut the costs of labor and (re)production in order to increase capital accumulation. As such, I argue that social reproduction in Lebanon appears to represent a rather permanent microcosm of current structures of social-reproductive conditions and crises on a global scale. In other words, I show that the organization of domestic labor and social reproduction in Lebanon ought to be perceived as directly structured by the capitalist mode of (re)production on all its various scales, especially in its current crisis-phase.
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Social Reproduction
dc.subject Migrant domestic workers
dc.subject Labor
dc.subject Domestic labor
dc.subject Reproductive Labor
dc.subject Gender
dc.subject Lebanon
dc.subject Crisis of care
dc.subject Housework
dc.subject Social welfare
dc.subject Class, race, gender, sexuality, citizenship
dc.subject Crisis
dc.subject Labor power
dc.subject Livelihood
dc.subject Feminist political economy
dc.subject Marxist Feminism
dc.subject Migrant labor
dc.subject Means of production and reproduction
dc.subject Family and labor relations
dc.subject Commodification
dc.subject Privatization
dc.subject Precarity
dc.subject Dispossession
dc.title Social Reproduction in the Periphery: (Re)Producing Life in Lebanon
dc.type Thesis
dc.contributor.department Center for Arab and Middle Eastern Studies
dc.contributor.faculty Faculty of Arts and Sciences
dc.contributor.institution American University of Beirut


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search AUB ScholarWorks


Browse

My Account