Academic Journal

Anti-Work Architecture: Domestic Labour, Speculative Design, and Automated Plenty

Bibliographic Details
Title: Anti-Work Architecture: Domestic Labour, Speculative Design, and Automated Plenty
Authors: Hester Helen
Source: Open Philosophy, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 46-62 (2023)
Subject Terms: social reproduction, domestic labour, technofeminism, theories of work, anti-work politics, domestic architecture, Philosophy (General), B1-5802
Publisher Information: De Gruyter, 2023.
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: LCC:Philosophy (General)
Description: This article presents a partial history of visions of technodomesticity in the global north, concentrating on dwellings which seek to problematize, challenge, or reorganize unpaid household labour. It is structured around three case studies, primarily drawn from the United States in the 1950s and 1960s: the single-family suburban dream house, the bachelor pad, and the fully automated future home. While these chosen examples may lend us certain resources for thinking about how best to mitigate the challenges of reproductive labour via living arrangements, they also possess a number of clear drawbacks or limitations. The article will argue that contesting these imaginaries (as much as learning from them) is likely to prove necessary in unpicking the connections between an inequitable distribution of unpaid intrafamilial domestic labour and the house itself as both a concrete site and an ideological formation – necessary, that is to say, in terms of building a meaningfully feminist conception of anti-work architecture.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2543-8875
Relation: https://doaj.org/toc/2543-8875
DOI: 10.1515/opphil-2022-0226
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/da7cd3ec99104d358f02afc367e9ae59
Accession Number: edsdoj.7cd3ec99104d358f02afc367e9ae59
ISSN: 25438875
DOI: 10.1515/opphil-2022-0226
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals