Invisible Threads

  • Sheila Allen
Volume 12 Number 3
Published: July 1, 1981
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1759-5436.1981.mp12003008.x
This article explores some aspects of the widespread, though largely invisible, labour of people (mainly women) working for wages in their own homes. It is argued that this labour is an essential part of capitalist production, providing a flexible and cheap form of labour for a wide range of manufacturing industry. Its continued existence is not explicable by the characteristics of the workers, though some are relevant to understanding the low level of wages imposed on a fragmented and completely unprotected labour force.
From Issue: Vol. 12 No. 3 (1981) | Women and the Informal Sector