3 Quotes & Sayings By Eva Feder Kittay

Eva Feder Kittay is a psychoanalyst and psychotherapist. She specializes in the interdisciplinary treatment of personality disorders, neurotic and borderline personality disorders, trauma, and somatic symptoms. She has been the head of the Department of Psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College since 2002 and was Director of the Division of Psychoanalysis at Weill Cornell Medical College from 1998 to 2002. She is an elected member of the American Psychoanalytic Association, the New York Psychoanalytic Society, and the American Society for Psychotherapy Read more

She has also served on committees for the American Psychiatric Association, the New York Adult Guidance Clinic, the New York University Child Study Center, and the National Institute of Mental Health. She was president of the Association for Psychoanalysis in New York City from 1984 to 1986.

1
I began to see that while equality often entailed women crossing the sexual divide between women's work and men's work, equality rarely meant that men crossed over the divide to the women's side: our side — women's — the side where work was largely, though not exclusively, unpaid or poorly paid care of dependents. Eva Feder Kittay
2
The disparity, however, between the rewards offered in the labor market and the vital interest to have good dependency care makes it clear that market forces have not been relied upon to supply adequate dependency work. Indeed, a clear-eyed look at the nearly universal twin features of female caregiving and female subordination indicates: 1) that a certain class of persons has been subjected to and socialized to develop the character traits and the volitional structure needed for dependency work; 2) that certain sexual behaviors commensurate with forming attachments, being submissive to another's will, and so forth have been made compulsory for women; and 3) that poor women and women of color have been forced into paid employment as dependency workers by the scanty financial resources and limited employment opportunities available to them, and middle-class women have been forced out of paid employment not commensurate with their (largely unpaid) duties as dependency workers. It has not merely “happened” that women have consistently “chosen” to make dependency relations and dependency work central to their vision of the good life, while men have chosen a wider variety of options. Eva Feder Kittay