'The Working Subject': The Collusion of Law and Gender in the Construction of Working Subjects

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Abstract

This chapter explores how law and gender come together to co-constitute working subjects and with what conceptual, normative and distributive effects. The notion of subjectivity deployed here is both ontological and epistemological. It is ontological in the sense of being concerned with aspects of being – with who or what the subject is; and it is epistemological in that it is engaged with questions of knowledge – with how knowledge of and by the subject is produced and validated. Thus understood, subjectivity offers a space of enquiry into questions about the formation, shape and consequences of consciousness and the production, validation and effects of knowledge.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCambridge Companion to Gender and the Law
EditorsStephanie Hennette-Vauchez, Ruth Rubio Martin
Place of PublicationCambridge
PublisherCambridge University Press
Chapter5
Pages173-206
Number of pages33
ISBN (Electronic)9781108634069
ISBN (Print)9781108499248, 9781108713306
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • contract of employment
  • domestic work
  • equal pay
  • gender
  • labour law
  • precarity
  • subjectivity
  • worker

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