“For many of us, feminism denotes the task of abolishing all organized scarcities, from the private nuclear household to the nation. It’s the deprivatization of love, via the insurgency of mothers of every gender against the patriarchal institution of motherhood, the decoupling of survival from the wage, the destruction of markets, the ecological insistence on interspecies responsibility, the decarbonization of every mégapole, and the communization of continent-wide architecture: waterways, seed banks, and libraries. It’s a local proletarian strike against work (that always already gendered and stolen substance otherwise called alienated labor) and a planetary revolution in values that prioritizes care over accumulation. It’s a perfectly good name, too, for the horizon wherein work’s myriad precarious, abject, wageless, mad, incarcerated, and otherwise remaindered victims are avenged. As a revolutionary movement, feminism abolishes gender qua differential, while remaking genders qua lush, interesting, and pleasurable difference.” CareWorkFeminismRevolutionLaborGenderMotherhoodAbolitionPrison AbolitionFamily Abolition Book:Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation Source: Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation
“The family-- predicated on the privatization of that which should be common, and on proprietary concepts of couple, blood, gene, and seed-- is a state institution, not a popular organism.” CareFamilyCapitalismAbolition Author:Sophie Lewis
“...I submit that kinship, at least right now, is always a reference to something that is imagined to be inerasable; to "nature." Perhaps one day it will be fit for purpose again, who knows? Perhaps because the concept of nature has itself been turned inside out. But right now, even when it is conceptualized as practice-based, kinship functions as a linguistic appeal to something non-contingent that can ground a relation. And I am asking: can we suspend that fantasy of something non-contingent? Can we let go of it?” NatureFamilyAbolitionKin Book:Die Familie abschaffen: Wie wir Care-Arbeit und Verwandtschaft neu erfinden Source: Die Familie abschaffen: Wie wir Care-Arbeit und Verwandtschaft neu erfinden