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Home is where the heart is? Organizing women’s work and domesticity at Christmas

S. J Vachhani, A Pullen, Sheena Vachhani, Alison Pullen

Organization, Volume: 18, Issue: 6, Pages: 807 - 821

Swansea University Authors: Sheena Vachhani, Alison Pullen

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Abstract

<p>This article critically discusses domestication and women’s work in household organization at Christmas, a case of meta-organizing which fuels commercialization. Located in the growing body of work on contesting femininity that challenges traditional notions of femininity, we prob...

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Published in: Organization
ISSN: 1350-5084
Published: Sage Publications 2011
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa6760
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Abstract: <p>This article critically discusses domestication and women’s work in household organization at Christmas, a case of meta-organizing which fuels commercialization. Located in the growing body of work on contesting femininity that challenges traditional notions of femininity, we problematize the binary divide between women’s work at home and commercial organizations. By considering Christmas as a set of ritualistic activities replete with myths of femininity, we explore how the home—a major site of festival activity—constructs gender through the public/private divide. This division has been central to critical interpretations of women’s subordination in work and leisure spaces where the concept of home has attracted feminist attention through its association with exile or retreat into domesticity. Home is, however, a culturally and politically contested space, and this article argues that home-work is a productive retreat from commercial-work. Home relates to domesticity and rituals in paradoxical ways and attesting to the ambivalence of Christmas provides opportunities for the subversion of traditional discourses of women in the household, especially those associated with older ideas of femininity understood through ritualistic practice. We demonstrate this by analysing cultural representations of rituals located and practised in and around the home that are central to the enactment of Christmas and discern how these both subjugate and offer subversive possibilities for feminine subjectivity. Using contemporary representations of Christmas and home from media culture, we conclude that home is a feminist space with Christmas acting as a gift for women’s return to that space.</p>
Item Description: <p>3* ABS ranked journal</p>
Keywords: Christmas, domesticity, femininity, home, organizing, ritual, subjectivity, women’s work
College: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Issue: 6
Start Page: 807
End Page: 821