104 Wages For Housework: The Strategy for Women'’s Liberation Pat Sweeney Many “feminist” writers have contributed to the ideology of housework. Radical-feminists, while recognizing the identification of house- work with our female nature, have proposed sharing this work with a man and leaving the home for outside work. Socialist-feminists, de- scribing housework as precapitalist, have pro- claimed that our goal should be toward “indus- trialization,” which would liberate our time for more work—but in a factory, if not a collective kitchen. Liberal feminists have defined our problem as “lack of consciousness,” describing women as dupes of Madison Avenue ad-men. Finally, there are those feminists who, much to capitalists’ rejoicing, have glorified our forced labor in the home as the embodiment of the best human potentials: our capacity to nurture and care, our very capacity to love. One thing they all agree on is that women should not be paid for this work, because this presumably would institutionalize us in the home, and extend the control of the state to “the one area of freedom we have in our lives.” Contrary to these criticisms, the Wages for Housework Committee’s perspective is based on . the fact that housework is already controlled and institutionalized (Mother’s Day is nothing less than the celebration of this institutionaliza- tion!) precisely because this work is unwaged. Society is organized to force us into this job, and the fact that we don’t receive a wage for the work continuously undermines our power to refuse it. ' That housework is unwaged means first of all that it appears not as work, but as part of our female nature. Thus, when we refuse part of this work —as, for example, lesbian women do in refusing to provide sexual services to men—we are branded as perverts, as if we were breaking some law of nature. We are divided into “good” and “bad” women depending on whether or not we do the housework and whether or not we do it for free. In this society to be a good woman — or just to be a woman—is to be a good servant at everyone’s disposal 24 hours a day; it means accepting that this work should not be paid because it supposedly fulfills our nature, and thus contains its own reward. Housework is not just washing dishes, scrub- bing floors, or raising babies. What we do at home is produce and reproduce workers: every day we create and restore the capacity of others (and ourselves) to work, and to be exploited. It is ironic that as houseworkers we are not in- cluded in the nation’s labor force, for without this work the workforce would not exist. The lack of a wage obscures the indispensability of our work to the functioning of this society. Housework makes every other work possible. No car could be produced, no coal could be dug, no office could be run, if there were not women at home servicing and reproducing those who make the cars, those who dig the coal, those who run the offices. This is the sexual division of labor: workers make cars, and women make the workers who make the cars. And to make a worker is a much more time- and energy-consuming job than to make a car! Not only do we “reproduce” them physically— cooking their dinners, doing the shopping (shopping is work, not consumption as some “feminists” would have us believe). We also service workers emotionally —taking the brunt of their tiredness and frustration day after day. And we service workers sexually —the Saturday- night screw keeps them going for yet another week at the assembly line or desk. It appears that we freely donate all this work to our husbands and children out of our love for them. In reality we are working for the same bosses, who are getting two workers for the price of one. Our lives are governed by the same work schedule as those we serve. When we cook dinner or when we “make love” is determined by the factory time-clock. Not only the quan- tity, but also the quality of workers we repro- duce is controlled. If they don’t need many workers, we are sterilized; if they need more workers we are denied access to contraceptives and are forced to resort to backstreet butchers (the right to life is never claimed for women). Likewise, if we are on welfare or we tend to produce “troublemakers,” we are again steril- ized. In every case, our sexuality is continuously under control to make sure that we use it pro- ductively. Lesbianism and teenage sex are il- legal, and rape in the family (or the battered wife) is not a crime since readily available sexual service is part of our job. It is the lack of