Love and Work: A Response to Vicki Schultz's Life's Work

Posted: 10 Nov 2003

See all articles by Martha M. Ertman

Martha M. Ertman

University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law

Abstract

Professor Ertman engages Vicki Schultz's critique of proposals to remunerate homemaking labor on two fronts. First she questions the way Professor Schultz seems to assume a rigid barrier between love and work, suggesting instead that legal feminists need not choose between work for love and work for wages as the cornerstone of feminist legal reform. Second she challenges Schultz's suggestion that proposals to remunerate homemaking labor are backward thinking. Since wage labor is not the only route to citizenship, Professor Ertman contends, proposals to remunerate homemaking labor can buttress many women's citizenship claims. In particular, she explains, they have the potential to effect both positive change by getting cash to many economically marginalized women and normative change by reconstructing gender and sexual orientation.

Suggested Citation

Ertman, Martha M., Love and Work: A Response to Vicki Schultz's Life's Work. Columbia Law Revew, Vol. 102, No. 3, 2002, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=310704

Martha M. Ertman (Contact Author)

University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law ( email )

500 West Baltimore Street
Baltimore, MD 21201-1786
United States

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