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Chapter Twelve - The Labour Process and Health through the Lens of Marx’s Historical Materialism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2022

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Summary

Abstract

This chapter illustrates the value of Karl Marx's historical materialist approach for the analysis of the relation between capitalist development and health depletion. Tracing Marx's observations on health and exploitation in Capital, the chapter highlights their contemporary relevance and limitations for the study of modern and more contemporary forms of homework. The analysis focuses on the Italian case and confirms the tight interrelation between high degrees of gendered exploitation in the home and adverse health outcomes. It stresses the benefits and challenges of deploying Marx's concrete methods of enquiry in relation to health and work – often based on detailed reports by labour inspectors and doctors – in general and with reference to the case of Italian homework in historical perspective, and it points at some of the theoretical limitations of Marxian understandings of domestic labour in relation to its social longevity, structural role in capitalist development and relation to the state.

Introduction

Among his many contributions, Karl Marx should have recognition for his ability to combine empirical analysis and theoretical elaboration with a diachronic and synchronic perspective. From the detailed analysis of the Reports of the Inspectors of Factories, the Reports of the Children's Employment Commission and the Reports on Public Health, Marx derives crucial elements to understand the relations of production and social reproduction in his age. Notably, Marx does not limit himself to reporting what inspectors and occupational physicians note during their work; rather he shows the interrelations between health and production by offering an analytical perspective that over time has inspired the work of generations of social scientists.

This chapter retraces Marx's observations on health in an attempt to highlight their close connection with work, and it stresses the value of the historical materialist explanation in the analysis of the connections between capitalist development and the expropriation of health. Marx's description of the working conditions in the sweatshops of nineteenth-century London are fully comparable to what happens today in sweatshops working for H&M, Zara, Benetton and other global fashion brands.

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Marx in the Field , pp. 161 - 174
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2021

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