Cleaning up the "dirt": a study of Maggie Gee's My Cleaner

2014-01-01
Maggie Gee's 2005 novel, My Cleaner, is critical of international divisions of domestic labor in the neocolonial world, which reproduce global hierarchies of class, gender and race within middle-class households of "developed" countries. Not only does Gee critically explore domestic service in today's London from a global perspective, but she also makes use of the relationship between Mary Tendo (an immigrant servant woman from Uganda, one of Britain's former colonies) and her white, middle-class English employer, Vanessa Henman, to explore the tensions, contestations and renegotiations performed in contemporary narrations of English identity. However, Mary's smooth relationship with the English language, as well as with her national identity, signals the lack of a postcolonial approach in the novel to hierarchies played out in these sites. The aim of this article is to explore such ambivalences in the portrayal of a black female character in Gee's My Cleaner.
JOURNAL OF POSTCOLONIAL WRITING

Suggestions

Motherhood in Pat Barker’s post-industrial working-class fiction: a study of Union Street and Liza’s England /
Çağlar, Bircan; Öztabak Avcı, Elif; Department of English Literature (2014)
This thesis aims to explore issues such as motherhood, poverty, entrapment, procreation, abortion, alienation and violence in Pat Barker’s two early post-industrial novels Union Street and Liza’s England by foregrounding the role of socio-economic factors in female characters’ oppression. Christine Delphy’s Close to Home and Stevi Jackson’s “Women and the Family” have been used as a theoretical framework in order to explore Barker’s portrayal of working-class wives’ and mothers’ oppression in a patriarchal ...
Thinking gender, nature and power: a hope for standpoint ecofeminism
Çetinkaya, Tuğçe; Ecevi, Mehmet C.,; Department of Gender and Women's Studies (2019)
Ecofeminism focuses on the relation between the domination on women and natureandprovides widened critique of domination by including the analysis of anthropocentrismin feminism, which is nurtured by the analysis of sexism, capitalism, racism, ethnicityand heterosexism; therefore, it presents an imagination of freedom aimed at including nonhuman entities.It is clear that women‘s association with nature has been used as animportant means of establishing superior...
Making and unmaking of class : an inquiry into the working class experiences of garment workers in Istanbul under flexible and precarious conditions
Çubukçu, Soner; Erdoğan, Necmi; Department of Political Science and Public Administration (2012)
This thesis analyzes class experiences of workers under flexible and precarious conditions of global neoliberal capitalism and tries to answer to what extent these conditions erode their capacities to develop antagonistic class consciousness and collective struggles. Specifically, based on a fieldwork consisting of semi-structured in-depth interviews with 24 workers living in slums of Istanbul, it deals with cultural analysis of working and daily-life experiences of workers involved in the global production...
Woman’s labor and poverty : the case of Eskisehir province in Turkey
Güneş, Fatime; Ecevit, Mehmet Cihan; Department of Sociology (2006)
This study examines critically how women in poverty use their labor in the production and reproduction processes against poverty and the effects of these processes on women becoming poor referring to women’s knowledge. The material foundation of women’s poverty is conceptualized as a two-way devaluation of women’s labor used in social reproduction. Patriarchal, cultural and ideological structures and relationships are studied as other determinants of women’s poverty. In this framework, women’s poverty studi...
Women and Occupational Sex Segregation In Turkish Labor Market, 2004-2010
Gülen, Gülşah; Erdil, Erkan; Department of Economics (2012)
The effects of occupational sex segregation on wage differentials and poverty, and the factors behind the differentiation on occupational choices are analyzed in various studies. There are also recent studies analyzing Turkish case. However, there are limited attempts combining both segregation and occupational decision in Turkish labor market. This thesis wants to fill this gap and as well as contribute the literature of Turkish labor market and OSS, with analyzing the most current data of Household Labor ...
Citation Formats
E. Öztabak Avcı, “Cleaning up the “dirt”: a study of Maggie Gee’s My Cleaner,” JOURNAL OF POSTCOLONIAL WRITING, pp. 478–491, 2014, Accessed: 00, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/37721.