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This work explores the severe repercussions of undervaluing those engaged in the "women’s work" of childcare and housekeeping. Immigrant nannies, who take on the mothercoin—the labor of mothering separated from family and traded in a global market—highlight a significant contradiction: while childcare is often confined to the private sphere and remains largely unseen, the love and labor involved are essential to societal functioning. The narratives of these workers expose the harsh realities of this undervaluation. As caregivers and cleaners migrate from impoverished areas to wealthier ones, they leave behind a palpable void felt by their families. Meanwhile, children in affluent regions receive care in tidy homes, with their parents often working longer hours and grappling with the emotional toll of separation. In the U.S., many of these women find their voices stifled by language barriers, fear, or systemic powerlessness. Yet, even in obscurity, immigrant nannies lead rich, complex lives filled with desire, loss, anger, and passion. This exploration not only recounts the experiences of Mexican and Central American women working in Houston's private homes but also addresses broader themes of global immigration, working motherhood, and the interplay between private experiences and the public world we have constructed.
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Mothercoin, Elizabeth Cummins Munoz
- Lingua
- Pubblicato
- 2023
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- (In brossura)
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