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list price: $125.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: eBook
category: Social Science
published: Mar 1994
ISBN:9780773511644
publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press

Relations of Ruling

Class and Gender in Postindustrial Societies

by Wallace Clement & John Myles

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Description

For some, the postindustrial world promises a new kind of capitalism that will draw its vitality from an expansion of knowledge and the creative capacities of working men and women. Others have highlighted postindustrialism's darker side and concluded that it is simply the next stage in the degradation of labour. For some, the massive entry of women into paid labour that accompanies postindustrialism will finally liberate women from domestic patriarchy. For others, it is no more than an extension of private patriarchy into the public sphere. The authors show that historical residues and the contemporary impact of major economic and political factors have produced not one but several postindustrial trajectories. They reveal how postindustrialism has brought a new distribution of productive forces and of effective powers over people, and show that the shape of that distribution varies considerably in different countries and different fields as a result of both institutionalized practices (inherited from industrial capitalism) and the contemporary effects of state policies, organized labour, and the women's movement. Addressing issues of class and gender, Relations of Ruling deals with problems involved in regulating paid labour as well as the relationship between paid and domestic labour. It will be of particular interest to specialists in gender issues and scholars in women's, family, and labour studies.

About the Authors

Wallace Clement

WALLACE CLEMENT is a Professor of Sociology at Carleton University since and the Director of Carleton's Institute of Political Economy.

John Myles is professor emeritus of sociology and senior fellow in the School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Toronto.
Editorial Review

"The comparative perspective ... sheds new light on a number of questions about Canada and allows for a more complex understanding of how attitudes and material conditions interrelate." Caroline Andrew, Department of Political Science, University of Ottawa.

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