Family-friendly as a double-edged sword Lesson from the "lactation-friendly" workplace

Family-friendly as a double-edged sword Lesson from the "lactation-friendly" workplace

Family-friendly as a double-edged sword

Lesson from the "lactation-friendly" workplace

Bentovim

Orit Avishai

Bentovim, Orit Avishai

Author

Author

University of California, Berkeley

Center for Working Families

University of California, Berkeley. Center for Working Families

Sponsor

Sponsor

text

working paper

Berkeley, CA Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley 2002 2002 monographic

Berkeley, CA

Berkeley, CA

Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley

2002

2002

monographic

English eng

English

eng

electronic application/pdf 28 p. born digital

electronic

application/pdf

28 p.

born digital

Critics of family-friendly policies contend that family-friendly policies should be retooled in support of the struggle to restructure the capitalist labor contract, dismantling the gendered assumptions that underlie the ideal worker as a detached and disembodied individual, unencumbered by external commitments. This paper considers whether accommodations for breast-feeding women who pump their breasts in their place of employment possess such a radical potential. Interviews with a small group of middle class women indicate that, in many cases, these accommodations exacerbate, rather than alleviate, women's double burdens. In addition, this paper shows that rather than challenging capitalist organizational culture and its ideal disembodied worker, women who pump in the workplace reproduce this image. By turning their bodies into a project to be managed, they create a distance between the "woman in the suit" and "the woman in the body", thereby failing to challenge the standard capitalist ethos.

Grounded in women's experiences in "lactation friendly" workplaces, this paper also provides an ethnographic backdrop to a growing body of literature that calls for the development and implementation of lactation-friendly policies.

Orit Avishai Bentovim is a Ph.D. candidate in the Sociology Department at the University of California, Berkeley, and a graduate student affiliate of the Center for Working Families.

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 46

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 46

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper

No. 46

Use of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons "Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States" (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/)

wfn_bwpaper_8.pdf

wfn_bwpaper_8.pdf

MChB English eng

MChB

English eng

English

eng