“But just as the material necessity to produce the means of production and subsistence does not determine the historically specific social relations in which they are produced, the biology of procreation does not determine the mode of reproduction, i.e. social relations in which children are born and raised, although it imposes limits on their variations. (,,,) this family form [nuclear family unit of parents and children] is prevalent in capitalist societies; it is not, however, universal because those functions can be fulfilled within a variety of social arrangements” FamilyBiologyNuclear FamilySocial ReproductionFamily FormsMode Od ReproductionMode Of Production Book:Marx, Women, and Capitalist Social Reproduction: Marxist Feminist Essays Source: Marx, Women, and Capitalist Social Reproduction: Marxist Feminist Essays