On a left list like this I don't think it is in dispute that housework
and cleaning is largely gendered. That is even with real progress made
by women in this area, on average (with plenty of exceptions) men do a
smaller share of the housework than women, and expect more of the
credit besides. Janitors skew male, but then again Janitors do lots of
stuff besides cleaning.

So what I'm wondering two things. First, what are the best feminist
works on this, and (if not the same) what are good feminist takes on
this with strong intersectionality (race & class)?  Second has anyone
done work specifically  on how gendering of housework affects respect
or lack of respect for this kind of work, even when it is men who do
it?

I have a hypothesis and I'm looking for either support or refutation
(or mixed evidence or lack of evidence of that is how it goes). I'll
outline facts and the missing pieces:

1) Fact I have support for: lots of energy and resources are wasted in
industrial processes that could be saved by simply applying the
knowledge from housework. Sometimes it is literal lack of housework
where workspace are allowed to get dusty and damage delicate
equiipment and result in higher defect rates. Sometimes is  just
strong parallels to housework, where bath processes (process where
parts are immersed in liquid) use too shallow vessels resulting in
more frequent overflow accidents. And so on.

2) Fact I have support for: Designers of Industrial processes are
overwhelmingly (though not exclusively male.

3) My speculation. Probably designers of industrial processes have
less knowledge of housework than they would if it was a field with
gender equality.  But it is highly unlikely that nobody in the field
does their own housework or that nobody in the field knows how to do
housework well. Growing up in apartmentsI knew a  fair number of
working class single men  who kept their apartments clean because they
did not want to live in a mess, and also because single guys with
clean apartments had better luck getting second dates.  So some of the
designers of such processes did have knowledge they could have
applied. And the gender balance is skewed, not zero in any case. (Not
that I have not know woman slobs as well. Again slob skews male, but
not 100%.)

4) My Hypothesis: Even the substantial minority of designers of
industrial processes who understand housework don't respect it, don't
think of it as valuable work and especially don't think of it as
having an intellectual component. So even those who had the skill did
not think of applying them to designing industrial processes. I
suspect the macho atmosphere in manufacturing industry may contribute
to this. I would love to get data and analysis that supports this, or
rebuts this. So any suggestions would be welcome.

-- 
Facebook: Gar Lipow  Twitter: GarLipow
Grist Blog: http://www.grist.org/member/1598
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