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What does housework include?
Including:

1. Wash clothes, brush shoes, fold clothes, tidy wardrobe, clean toilets, clean windows, sweep the floor, mop the floor, take out garbage, wash cups and make tea.

2. Buy food, wash vegetables, prepare breakfast, cook, wash dishes, wash chopsticks, clear the table, wash the pot, tidy up the furniture, and keep the house clean and tidy.

3. Suitable decorators, make beds, wash sheets and quilts, sort out sundries (selling newspaper waste books), take children, send children to school and send their families out.

4. Buy clothes, walk with the elderly, listen to their family's troubles, understand their habits, buy what they like to eat, and understand their physical condition.

5. Buy medicine, fruit, rice, oil and salt, daily necessities, clothes for family members, diapers for babies, quilts for children at night and so on.

Extended data:

The division of housework is different in different cultures and societies. Sociologists, especially feminists, are very concerned about the nature of housework.

One view is that housework does not belong to social productive labor and does not create value. It is the obligation that women should fulfill after marriage, especially after becoming mothers, and the service that men are entitled to enjoy as husbands.

Another view is that housework reproduces the labor force of family members who work outside the home, and at the same time, it also breeds, nurtures and reproduces the next generation of labor force. There is also a view that housework in capitalist society reduces the value of wages, thus increasing the surplus value.

References:

Housework-Baidu Encyclopedia