Absent men: paid domestic work, sexual exploitation and male domination in the family in the USA

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Abstract

This article analyzes the sexual exploitation of paid domestic workers in the US through the lens of male domination in employing families. Departing from the dominant tendency in studies of paid domestic work to focus on relationships between female employers and workers, the article addresses the role of male domination and patriarchal family structures within employing families in the sexual exploitation of domestic workers by male employers. Using materialist feminist approaches, the article argues that domestic workers’ experiences should be seen as embedded in the patriarchal environment created by male household heads who appropriate the labor of other household members, including wives, children and paid domestic workers. The sexual exploitation of domestic workers is then analyzed as being a result of the appropriation of women’s entire personhood by men within the relationship of sexage outlined by Colette Guillaumin.

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Weiss, C. (2017). Absent men: paid domestic work, sexual exploitation and male domination in the family in the USA. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 19(3), 342–356. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2017.1293941

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