“…Scholarship that delineates social reproduction as a process that entails both the reproduction and transformation of power is not limited, however, to socialist historical contexts. For example, in an article on the history of how gender figured in political cartoons produced in pre‐Revolutionary Iran, Sahar Razavi (2021) astutely notes that the analytics of social reproduction captures “both state control and spaces of counterhegemonic resistance” as women's bodies and social roles formed a locus of contestation by competing political factions over the future of the nation (p. 71). Writing about Atlantic world slavery, Diana Paton (2022) and Jennifer Morgan (2021) show how enslaved women's reproductive labor, while integral to the reproduction of slavery, contained, in Paton's words, “an affective and emotional dimension to it as well, with particularly profound meanings in contexts of racist oppression” (p. 732).…”