Ben Waber reviewed Women, Race & Class by Angela Y. Davis
A Classic but Uneven Work of Scholarship
5 stars
That this book was written in the early 80s is extremely impressive, given how many of the ideas and concepts Davis puts forward have only recently become mainstream. Most of this book is an excellent combination of philosophy, history, and sociology, with Davis using case studies and more qualitative work to illustrate more macro trends, which she mostly backs up with more quantitative metrics. This isn't true across all chapters, however, and in some sections she makes broad based claims (e.g. "X is known") with no supporting evidence. Additionally, the chapter on housework is weird, given that she is essentially advocating for a hypercapitalist model of housework professionalization (which neoliberal economists love) and claims that they wouldn't like it - this is demonstrably false (see most economics books/papers published since the 40s). That aside, this is a singular, prescient work that remains important for our times. Highly recommend
That this book was written in the early 80s is extremely impressive, given how many of the ideas and concepts Davis puts forward have only recently become mainstream. Most of this book is an excellent combination of philosophy, history, and sociology, with Davis using case studies and more qualitative work to illustrate more macro trends, which she mostly backs up with more quantitative metrics. This isn't true across all chapters, however, and in some sections she makes broad based claims (e.g. "X is known") with no supporting evidence. Additionally, the chapter on housework is weird, given that she is essentially advocating for a hypercapitalist model of housework professionalization (which neoliberal economists love) and claims that they wouldn't like it - this is demonstrably false (see most economics books/papers published since the 40s). That aside, this is a singular, prescient work that remains important for our times. Highly recommend