ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1981, Woman’s Worth takes up the challenge to the male preserve of economics – which was raised nearly a century ago by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in her classic work Women and Economics.

Patriarchal economic systems – socialist as well as capitalist – are founded upon women’s unpaid labour. On this premise, Lisa Leghorn and Katherine Parker base their exploration of the economic basis of women’s culture across cultures: from the USA to South America, the Middle East, socialist countries, Africa and Europe.

Women’s Worth is accessible and informative to those who have been intimidated by the term ‘international economics’. Its sources are women’s perspective and experience in many countries, in their words and in their writings, published and unpublished. Thus the authors are able to reveal the economic nature of facets of women’s lives which have hitherto been dismissed by traditional economics as features of family or personal life, and to build a new vision of an economics based in female values.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

Sexual economics explored

chapter 2|27 pages

Shouldering the high cost of development

chapter 4|74 pages

The personal is economic

chapter 5|44 pages

She who sows does not reap

chapter 6|24 pages

The winds of change

chapter 7|79 pages

The economy of the world of women