Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Indebted Woman

Regular price $25.00
Regular price $25.00 Sale price $25.00
Sold out
Women, and particularly poor women, have become essential cogs in the wheel of financialized capitalism. Globally, women are responsible for managing household debt, and that debt has exploded over...
Read More
  • 19 September 2023
View Product Details

Women, and particularly poor women, have become essential cogs in the wheel of financialized capitalism. Globally, women are responsible for managing household debt, and that debt has exploded over the last decade, reaching an all-time high after the COVID-19 pandemic. Across various categories of loans, including subprime lending, microcredit policies, and consumer loans, as well as rent and utilities, women are overrepresented as clients and managers, and are being enfolded into the system. The Indebted Woman discusses the crucial yet invisible roles poor women play in making and consolidating debt and credit markets. Isabelle Guérin, Santosh Kumar, and G. Venkatasubramanian spent over two decades observing a credit market that specifically targets women in the Indian countryside of east-central Tamil Nadu. They found that paying off debts required labor, frequently involved sexual transactions, and shaped women's bodies and subjectivities. Bringing together ethnography, statistical surveys, and financial diaries, they offer for the first time a comprehensive theory for this sexual division of debt that goes far beyond the Indian case, exposing the ways capitalism transforms womanhood and how this transformation in turn fuels capitalism.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $25.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Culture and Economic Life
Publication Date: 19 September 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503636903
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
"This book is pathbreaking in the most literal sense: it opens the way for more studies of women and debt as central features of capitalist economies. It gives insight into the ways in which the reproduction of capital depends on women's reproductive labor as household debt managers, but also into the ways in which they strategically navigate the system." —Joan W. Scott, Princeton University
Isabelle Guérin is Senior Research Fellow at the French Institute of Research for Sustainable Development, and Associate at the French Institute of Pondicherry. Santosh Kumar is a part-time researcher and founder and head of the Mithralaya School of music, dance, and arts. G. Venkatasubramanian has been a sociologist and Research Fellow at the French Institute of Pondicherry for the past thirty-five years.
Introduction
1. Intimacies and Measurement
2. Kinship Debt
3. The Sexual Division of Debt
4. Debt Work
5. Bodily Collateral
6. Debt and Love
7. Human Debts
8. What Does the Future Hold?