img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Housework, Consumption and Female Labour in Japan, 1600—1940

Understanding the Role of Unpaid Work in Determining Living Standards

Penelope Francks

PDF
ca. 42,79

Springer Nature Switzerland img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Allgemeines, Lexika

Beschreibung

This book illuminates the largely neglected contribution of unpaid, primarily female household labour to economic production and living standards in Japan from the early modern period to the eve of World War Two.

The difficulties involved in measuring time devoted to housework and other forms of household labour in the past have meant that most attempts to assess the process of industrialisation have failed to recognise the ways in which such labour is essential to the sustainability and welfare of the population. In this context, Japan presents a significant example of a historical case of industrialisation occurring within an economy that continued to be dominated by the institution of the household.  This short study argues that this must have led to a particularly significant underestimation of Japanese living standards in the past, with implications for comparative and global analysis, and to neglect of the key role of women in the historical economy. Providing a nuanced yet concise analysis, this book will be valuable reading for scholars of economic history and feminist economics, as well as introducing important comparative angles for researchers in Japanese studies and gender studies more widely.

Weitere Titel in dieser Kategorie
Cover What Next?
Jane Moffett
Cover Mega Returns
David Skarica
Cover Eyes Wide Open
Addonis Willow
Cover The Wealth Disruption
Benjamin Henry Carter
Cover Mindset to Millions
James Anderson
Cover The Valerian Ledger
Jonathan Hughes

Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

economic development, global comparisons of living standards, female labour force, housework, role of unpaid work in the Japanese economy, Unpaid household labour, unpaid work, invisible labour, economic history of women’s work, Gender Economics, industrialisation, living standards, consumption