CEU eTD Collection (2012); Mazzotti, Barbara: Fertility Politics and Postfordist System in Italy:Precarity, Feminization of Labour and the Biopolitical Womb

CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2012
Author Mazzotti, Barbara
Title Fertility Politics and Postfordist System in Italy:Precarity, Feminization of Labour and the Biopolitical Womb
Summary To grasp the meaning of fertility politics in an economic context, this research focuses on the shift to a postfordist mode of production through the analysis of the technologies enacted by biopower.Foucault’s notion of technologies of production, are strictly related to the technologies of sign systems, to the technologies of power and to the technologies of the self, as tools of governance and production of meanings in western societies. Analysing fertility politics in contemporary Italy, we try to connect the market, i.e., the postfordist neoliberal economy, to the biopolitical understanding of these technologies. How does the regulation of fertility changes according to the technological arrangement of production? The attempt to answer this question requires an analysis of how technologies are mutually functioning to sustain a certain biopower which, we claim, collapsed in the economy, when the feminization of labour became the technology to maintain the neoliberal competition and the flexibilization of the labour force. Also, a certain account of biopower, localizes in the womb the space of exception in which the logic of biopower enacts the regulation of populations and defines women as new “neutral” subjects of politics. We claim that this position of the womb and of women in the realm of the politics over life can be recognized in the phenomenon of feminization of labour. We conclude that the internalization of competition, at stake for the neoliberal economy, works through a subjectivation which works through self-regulation of the wombs, seeking for a successful maternity, which is discouraged by the labour system and promoted by the main discourses about birth-rate and modernization. Women, “those at risk”, become also the reproducer of social classes, and this implies a certain construction of citizenship, race and migration, as of the precarization of labor.
Supervisor Loutfi, Anna
Department Gender Studies MA
Full texthttps://www.etd.ceu.edu/2012/mazzotti_barbara.pdf

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