They Call It Love
The Politics of Emotional Life
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Verso Books
Published:6th Feb '24
Should be back in stock very soon
This insightful exploration reveals how emotional labor shapes relationships and society. They Call It Love advocates for a feminist rethinking of love's work.
In They Call It Love, the author delves into the intricate dynamics of emotional labor and its impact on society. The text posits that love, often romanticized, is fundamentally a feminist issue that necessitates feminist approaches to address its complexities. By exploring the contributions of the feminist movement, particularly the Wages for Housework campaign, the book emphasizes the significance of emotional work in sustaining societal structures and norms.
The narrative examines the often invisible labor that underpins relationships and family life, highlighting who engages in this work and the societal expectations surrounding it. This exploration reveals how emotional labor is organized and the potential for transformative change within these frameworks. The author argues that in order to truly address the challenges posed by love's labor, a radical rethinking of societal values and structures is essential.
Through a blend of personal anecdotes, feminist theory, and critical analysis, They Call It Love invites readers to reconsider the role of love in their lives and its broader implications for gender equality. The book serves as a call to action, urging a collective reevaluation of emotional labor and its recognition as a vital component of social reproduction, ultimately advocating for a more equitable distribution of this essential work.
Intellectually nourished my thinking and language on gender. -- Raymond Antrobus, Best Books of 2023 * Granta *
A fascinating and exhaustive explanation as to why emotions are a political issue. -- Brit Dawson * AnOther Magazine *
They Call It Love shines a light on the invisible labour involved in love, examining who is responsible for performing it, how it can blossom, and why we do it. -- Adele Walton * Dazed *
Gotby makes clear our emotional lives are inherently political. Her analysis of the politics of reproductive labour is a cogent criticism of the bourgeois capitalist logics of feeling, of the free labour of intimacy and of normative femininity. -- Adele Cassigneul * Mai *
Gotby's narrative masterfully outlines how emotions, feelings and their manifestations tend to be portrayed, and understood, as a feminine domain of expertise ... Gotby brilliantly dismantles the silences and abuses surrounding this invisible work by naming it and showing its societal (and capital) worth -- Patrycja Sosnowska-Buxton * Sociological Review *
They Call It Love is a very fine book - one that balances polemical force with careful and rigorous research. In advancing its account of emotional reproduction, it brings together existing bodies of work on unwaged social reproduction and remunerated emotional labour to great effect, shining a light upon a too often overlooked (and heavily gendered) form of work. It is sharp, thoughtful, and well-written, and represents a substantial scholarly achievement. Alva Gotby is a writer and thinker to watch out for. -- Helen Hester, author of Xenofeminism, co-author of After Work
This thorough book sheds new light on the critics of the political economy on emotional life. It is a welcome addition to the studies on the social meaning of the immaterial production that takes place in the domestic sphere. The Call It Love is a fascinating insider's account of the hidden, economic dimension of our emotional lives whose subject matter will make for passionate arguments and conversations among feminists and scholars in general. -- Leopoldina Fortunati, author of The Arcane of Reproduction
Gotby's book importantly attempts to underscore and theorise the role of emotions within social reproduction theory. Her concept of 'emotional reproduction' is a reminder that fife-making work is not devoid of affect. -- Sara Farris, author of In the Name of Women's Rights
They Call It Love is a call to attention: Alva Gotby astutely maps the work of emotional support and care that is done day in and day out and across everyday life. Gotby not only insists that more value be attributed to emotional reproduction, but makes a sophisticated and compelling case for a radical repurposing of emotions, needs, and desires in the struggle for change - a struggle that is necessarily also a struggle for new ways of being together. -- Emma Dowling, author of The Care Crisis
ISBN: 9781839767043
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 13mm
Weight: 158g
192 pages