Page Four FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 2, 1915 Page Four EHE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 2, 'I91~ R== EPAREmF===mm PREPARE FOR THE i BO -dOKlb>-i < ~ S : . I MCAT, DAT, LSAT,__ GRE, & ATGSB 'The housewife as MONEY BACK GUARANTEE v Multinationals: The LOCAL CLASSES BEGINNING SOON I A Unique Approach to EXAMINATION PREPARATION E THE TEST CENTER (313) 663-3598 -pm - m- ---- - --- - a - i EXPERT BODY WORK HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 8-6, SAT. 10-2 2255 S. Industrial Hiahway Ann Arbor, Michigan 994-4805 See how nice yourscar can look for as low as * FACTORY-OVEN BAKED * ORIGINAL FACTORY COLOR OR * 7000 COLOR CHOICES 0 1-DAY PAINT JOBS * FREE INSURANCE ESTIMATES downtrodden worker WOMAN'S WORK: T H E phy alone is 18 pages long), and HOUSEWIFE, PAST A N D convincing. PRESENT, by Ann Oakley. ("AKLEY BEGINS by show- New York: Pantheon Books, ing that housewifery is a rel- 1974, 275 pp. $8.95. atively recent occupation for women. In pre-industrial times By BETSY AMSTER the entire family - children, .N GREAT BRITAIN in 1973, women, men - was a unit of PNGEt BGITAI became t production. Women worked in Peter Giles became the agriculture, textiles, and trade: first criminal offender to be Oakley notes that only S out sentenced not to jail but to of the 500 British trade guilds housework, and he took the 1 whose records survive did not first step toward earning his admit women. But the advent freedom by cleaning a senior of the factory took production citizen's flat. As Ann Oakley out of the family sphere, and at relates in her study of Woman's the same time idle wives be- Work: The Housewife, Past came a status symbol among and Present, one outraged wo- the rising middle class. man journalist responded: "It g may come as a surprise to the Although many women work may e a dealt it rthe M ed in factories early in the magistrate who d wi Mr. 19th century, during the sec- Giles . that thousands of ond half of the century the women- in this country are m- middle-class doctrine of femi- terned for varying periods of nine domesticity began to in- time, week in and week out, fluence the working classes as performing the new ultimate de- well. The role of the housewife terrent known as 'housework.' became firmly entrenched Many are finding it difficult to gs remember wa fes among women in all classes in what offense they the Western world by the early committed in the first place. 20th century. Woman's Work is a serious Turning to the situation of and scholarly protest against the modern housewife, Oakley the social sanctions that con- shows that housewifery is pro- fine too many women to the bably the least fulfilling occu- home. Oakley argues against ation in Western society. Tier two myths currently influentialpmos ingeservoty.nHes in Western society: that labor most striking observation is is natrl n ce:stharilaby d that "housewives experience s naturally and necessarily di- more monotony, fragmentation! vided by sex, and that mother- and social isolation in their' hood and housekeeping are the work than do workers in the most appropriate vocations for factory," and she has the sta- women. tistics to prove it. By drawing extensively on Oakley also shows that, con- historical, psychological, socio- trary to popular belief, the de- logical, and anthropological re- mands of motherhood are anti- search, she proves to the read- thetical to rather than con- er that these myths, although sonant with the demands of the3 masquerading as statements of housewife role: children are fact, merely validate and per- "neither tidy nor clean," and petuate the inferior position of "their demands are not neces- women. This claim is hardly sarily timed to integrate with new to feminism, but Oakley's housework routines, and may study is particularly readable, ! positively frustrate the moth- comprehensive (the bibliogra- er in her role as housewife." It's the combination of the baby, and the housework that's so dif- ficult," corroborates one of the housewives Oakley inter- viewed. WY/oman's Work includes four, lengthy interviews with housewives of varying socio- economic backgrounds; Oakley, knows that no amount of statis- tics can shed light on the house- wife's role as well as the wo- men themselves. What consist- ently emerges from these inter- views is the housewife's ambi- valence about her role. One new fiscal strangler GLOBAL REACH: The Pow-' of the Multinational Corpora- tions by Richard J. Barnet and Ronald E. Muller. New York: Simon and Schuster, 508 pages, $11.95. By JAMES HIPPS TN 1971 THE Fidelity Bank of Philadelphia, one of the larg- est in the nation, made loans of $120 million from its Naus- 1 tion shows that malnutrition is the primary or contributing cause of death in 57 per cent of all deaths in Latin America of one- to four-year-olds. Missing here are the children that sur- vived but remain pernianently brain - damaged. Ironically, in these same Latin American countries, the market-ability of Coca-Cola and Ritz Crackers is assured. woman complains about herE boredom and loneliness through-! out the interview, yet insists at the end, "I don't regret any- thing." The one housewife among the four who professes the most satisfaction with her role is also the one with theI most aches and pains - anxiety symptoms, in other words. The last part of Woman's Work is devoted to a fascinat- ing survey of women in other cultures that demonstrates how the division of labor by sex is entirely arbitrary. Individuals who maintain women are inher- ently weaker than men should be interested to learn of the Burundi in Africa, where the men are exempted from ardu- ous labor, or the Bbtui pygmies, among whom childbirth, is treated so casually, women are{ often on the hunt when it oc- curs. Oakley also shows that ther delegation of the mother- hood role to women is equally arbitrary. Motherhood is not a "practical resolution to penis envy" - as psychoanalytic the- ory sees it - but a learned be- havior. It is human warmth, not mothering in particular,I that children require. In Sa- moa, as well as in many other cultures, older siblings and sauorancn. ItI dorIac n Ion In the developed world the sisted of one desk, a closet, a multinationals, by employing; file cabinet, and a telephone. different sets of books for dif- This ability to manipulate phe- ferent purposes, can effectively -nonenal sums of monev is a supersede any attempts of gov- hallmark of the multinationals, ernment inspection. Creating an banks and corporations alike, internaional economy anchoredj the vast international enterpris- in no-man's land gives the mul- es which are the subject of tinations unprecedented power Global Reach. I a Rathm t eto take over government plan-I In an attem t to conceptoally ning functions, hastening the "gather-in' sthes i tinatonals, movement of the American thantorad Richar mrnet economy from one grounded in jadRonald E. Muller, must the manufacture of consumer cone with the scope and sudden thesmaneaedfonser proliferation of the mnltination- goods to one based on service. als' great exnansion. Their suc- Forced to import manufac- cesses in definition and analysis tured c o n s u m e r goods from make this an important book: abroad where the American- their failures merely soften the b a s e d multinationals h a v e impact of this resonant accusa- moved their plants, America , tion of the multinational' cor- must rely upon exportation of poration's -,base of power. lumber and agricultural goods 'hrough accounting techniques to maintain a proper balance of based in obfuscation and svs- payments. As such the United tematic deception, the multi- I t a t e s resembles the Latin national corporations evade gov- ernmental regulation in both America of past years and, in nroducing and consuming coun- the last few years, has encoun- t-les, as Barnet and Muller rig- tered unprecedented balance of{ orously document. payment problems. The result of the multina- tional's plying their trade is not, PUT THE starkest danger to I i i i 3 y i f I ,, ,; .{ 1 What is needed, say the authors, is an end to the struc- tural lag between the power of the multinational corporations and the growth of countervail- ing Federal government power. Only government regulation can serve this end. By forcing pub- lic disclosure of the multina- tionals' books, the information needed for regulation of the cor- porations may be obtained. Ad- ditionally, the tax credit favor- ing foreign investment by Amer- ican corporations s h o u l d be eliminated, as should the exist- ence of interlocking directorates of banks and industrial corpora- tions But the authors only too brief- ly note the possible trend to- ward e c o n o m i c nationalism which could restrain the multi- nationals, as they concentrate on utonian societal transformations. They talk of changing the "glo- bal valle system" as we be- come "global citizens." This an- alvsis lacks an essential sense of pragmatism. as ihev claim, 1r{motion of in-I * rna:ional perce and prg)ress, bot a world of poverty, urem- I ployment and inequality. TH multinationals' transfer of technology to nderde- grandparents care for children veloned nations wi serve as an while mothers work. To allow example. The global cornora- in our culture a similar free- tions present capital - intensive dom, Oakley advocates a radi- a n d labor - saving technology cal restructuring of society, in- which destroys jobs and abets cluding the abolition of the nu- already adverse income distri- clear family. bution. In the 1960's in poor LE cml.eswithacountries a r o u n d the world, AKLEY closes with a call to there was an increase in the women to reject house- income of the top S per cent of wifery and to socialize their the population accompanying a children without regard to sex decrease for the bottom 40 per roles. Easier said than done, of cent. In effect "millions in the course, but reading Woman's bottom 40 per cent of the popu- Work should exhilarate most lation actually have less food, women with a sense of their w o r s e clothing, and poorer 3 the United States is the "UT ULTIMATELY the book's structural lag between private t weak"ss lies in its vast and public power. Much as in shone. By trying to make com- the Gilded Age, the Federal nrebonsi1le the effects of mul- hetinational corporations world- government does not have the w+ athors lose their nar- power to regulate the immense rative thrpad. The discourse multinational corporations. Be- wvqers a-d falters as psycho- ing five years behind these cor- ', og al imnlication~s of the multi- noat'"lt are traded with inter- national l a b o r considerations niques, the government is los- and iugoled with the identity ing the battle for the informa- nrobles of the global man- tion necessary to even follow agers For the most part docu- the multinationals' a c t i o n s, me-tation of the effects of the much lss toregulteXthm. n-t" liatinnals is complete and much less to regulate them. far-reaching. By maneuvering Multinationals operate so in- human needs into categories dependently of the Federal gov- such as "psychological health" enentand account forgo and "basis of community," the emnent df authors arguments dismantle in- - much of the national economic to 'ins'ibstantiated relations of . activity, that Federal macro- cause and effect. It is difficult economic policy is becoming to attribllte the "sense of mean- obsolete. Fiscal and monetary inglessness in modern life" to the multinational corporations. I policies, since they operate only Gt within national bounds, cannot Gira reven ts its adequately influence economicticulate work even though its actions of the internationally- arguments lose their impact oriented multinational corpora- iwhen couched i generalities. tions. Not surprisingly, the gov- For the very newness of the ex- ement has been ineffectix, pansion of the multinational combatting inflation and reces- corporations makes this book a sidn. Indeed, the authors fur- unique herald-a herald of bet- nish a persuasive argument thatI ter or worse times to come, and msh pesuaive rguenttha a herald which must be heard. the U.S. has lost control of itsar domestic money supply to the James lip ps is a junior ma- multinationals. joring in economics. ( D CI o ooa u o aa own potential. Betsy Amster, a senior in En- ,lish, is co-editor of Astraea, a collection of women's writings. housing than their parents did." Some effects of lower incomes are obvious. Without money one cannot eat. A study by Allan Berg of the Brookings Institu- Living life in a box: A tale of actual and imagined isolation THE BOXMAN, by Kobe Abe, translated from Japanese by E. Dale Saunders. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 178 pp., $6.95. By CLAUDIA KRAUS ONCE WHEN I was about ten, I was at our neighbor'sj house when her three year oldI son came streaking out of the bathtub into the kitchen. Notic- ing me, he became suddenly embarrassed and shut his eyes while wrapping his arms around his head. 'If I can't see her,' he probably thought, 'she; can't see me either.'j The desire to become invisible in difficult situations does not diminish with age. The refuges of adults are more subtle but no less absurd. For adults take The 'boxman' begins telling refuge in fantasy, emerging from his story under a bridge escap- the sanctuary of their minds ing from the rain. He says that only when they imagine the he is waiting for the return of world less threatening. the woman with beautiful legs The Boxman, by the Japanesewhom he spoke with not long novelist, Kobe Abe, portrays the before. She's offered him a inside of one such private sanc- great sum of money for his tuary and bares its ultimate box. He cannot understand why failure as a refuge. anyone would want his old box, A boxman' is one who, be- but he's decided to sell anyway. cause of some combination of THE WOMAN does not come, desire and necessity, isolates so he goes to find her. She himself from the world. He turns out to be the nurse. The transfers his essential posses- 'boxman' crouches below the sions into a large cardboard window of the infirmary and box p r e p a r e d according to spies on her. She is standing certain standard specifications. there naked and nonchalantly There must be a peephole tur- talking with the doctor. Sudden- , tained by a vinyl sheet to keep ly the 'boxman' is also in-ide out weather and, most impor- the infirmary. He has been tantly, the unwanted scenes of wounded and the nurse is giv- the outside world. ing him a shot. b H The story jumps from one ab- WfHEN THE box is ready, the stract dream-like scene to an- man enters by putting it other. The 'boxman' changes over his head so that it covers roles with the doctor. He goes him to the knees. He walks back to his childhood. He tells away from h isprevious life to anecdotes about other 'boxmen.' Sal. Drop-In WORKSHOPS EWE n' DYE 994-1166 The small press has its day OT ALL publishing is done by large conglo- merates. The Detroit Public Library has set out to rectify this situation with a February ex- hibit devoted to the small press of Michigan, commenc- ing today with an Open House from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Main Branch, 5102 Wood- ward Avenue, Ann Arbor, with its ple- thora of small reviews and publishing houses will be heavily represented. Among local presses planning d i s- plays are Iron Horse Publish- ing, self-styled "creator of a new style of American Com- ic Art," The Street Fiction Press, best known to Ann Ar- bor readers for its 'Periodi- cal Lunch' and Anon, ARDIS, publishers of "Russian Liter- ature Triquarterly" and translations and criticisms of Russian literature, Apples Magazine of the Shining Wat- ers Press, and Generation. 13S C; 1 6C J 1 U J wander incognito. This information and the en- tire novel is communica' ed through the stream of con- sciousness narration of a name- less 'boxman.' It is his journal we are reading, a journal scrib- bled on the inner walls of his box. j It) _ . ... _ ._. - - I The greatest of the books Anderson, Bli Burroughs, Ca de Camp, Elli collection in town of: Aldiss, Asimov, ish, Brackett, Bradbury, rter, Delaney, Sprague A BE'S STORY is a hybrid,. neither t o t a I fantasy nor strict reality. The character has no more of a box over his head than does the reader. An opiatek haze, a paradise fantasy, a pair of sheltering arms, a box,t they're all the same. Kobo Abe has succeeded in flashing a picture of some addj creature, and then leading the reader to realize it's a mirror. Though the insanity of the 'box- man's' thoughts is universal, each individual controls how tightly he wraps himself in the comfortable quilt of fantasy. Abe does not condone such re- treat as his 'boxman' has taken. He shows that reality cannot be successfully locked out. I Claudia Kraus is a staff writ- er for the Michigan Daily. ison, Farmer, Henderson, YOU ALL COME ON DOWN and sign up for a chance to be a FALL ORIENTATION LEADER in the Orientation Office Herbert, Laumer, LeGuin, Leiber, Lewis, Lord, Lovecraft, Moorcock, Niven, Norman, Norton, Offutt, Peake, Silverberg, Simak, Smith, Tolkien, VanVoRt. Vonnegut, and many others. - I I __ ___ ___. _._ ____ ___ _ _ _T _ _ ._ _ ____ ___.. _ ____ .__ ,, Read and Use rno; pl "nceifm4e I E! II