Choose a household with which you are intimately familiar. Describe in detail (2 paragraphs) the division of labor in that household integrating relevant course materials into your description and analysis.
NOTE: Should be 2 paragraphs long 6-9 sentences each paragraph.
Household Labor & The Routine Production of Gender
• Doing gender sustains and legitimizes existing gender relations.
• Would inappropriate gender activity challenge that legitimacy?
• Or when people fail to do gender appropriately, are their individual characters, motives, and predispositions called into question.
Shared Parenting
• Fathers said: • Father-infant interaction helped them
develop “deep emotional trust” • “It [childcare] was not something innate, it
was something to be learned.” • Most fathers not equal caregiver for
children under one year. • What does this tell us.
Practicality & Flexibility
• Couples said it makes sense to share labor and be flexible in division or labor.
• One mother said, [Being flexible and changing division of tasks] “keeps things interesting. I think that’s why its satisfying.”
• Studies show flexibility benefits relationships.
Ideology • Underlying Ideology: Child-centered &
equity ideals. • Child-centered: Placed high value on
children’s well-being • Equity ideals: Treated children as
inexperienced equals. [Cultural] • All said that no one should be forced to
perform a specific task b/c they were a man or woman
Divisions of Household Labor
• Sample couples can be characterized as sharing an unusually high proportion of house-work and child-care compared to others.
• But still partially conformed to traditional division of household labor.
Divisions of Household Labor
• 25% of tasks performed mainly by mothers included clothes care, meal planning, repetitive house cleaning.
• 20% of tasks performed mainly by fathers included outside chores, home repair, car maintenance, lawn care.
Managing Vs. Helping • Mothers were often the managers: told
husbands what to do and how to do it. • Husbands were helpers. • Some mothers found it difficult to share
household management; Did not like relinquishing control à This links housecleaning styles to essential gender differences.
• Managing housework becomes the woman’s domain
Adult Socialization Through Childrearing
• Parenting is an essential part of the mother’s nature but is a learned capacity for fathers.
• Couples talked about fathers being socialized to become nurturing parents.
Adult Socialization Through Child-Rearing
• Father: Described as being transformed by parenting experience, developing increased sensitivity.
• Evaluated by fathers adopting vocabulary of motives and feelings similar to mother’s.
• Father: learns to notice subtle things from mother à enhances Child-rearing and marital interaction.
Gender Attributions
• Manager-helper couples: Legitimated their divisions of labor & reaffirmed the “naturalness” of essential gender differences.
• Equal sharing couples: Gender similarities hypothesisà some women nurture better than others; some men nurture better than other men
Gender Attributions • Parents most successful in child care were
most likely to claim that men could nurture like women.
• (i) Those who believed that men could nurture like women attempted to share all aspects of child care
• (ii) Successful sharing of child care reinforced beliefs that men could nurture like women.
Normalizing Atypical Behavior
• Father received more credit for family involvement than mother b/c it was expected that she would perform child care and housework.
• Father labeled as fantastic, wonderful, incredible.
• Father: praised for performing task that would go unnoticed if mother performed it
Normalizing Atypical Behavior
• Fathers: Discouraged from talking about family and children at work
• Co-workers disappointed that repeatedly turned down invitations to go out w/ boys
• Co-workers perceived them as not serious about their work.
• As a result, fathers hid extent of family involvement.
• What are the macro-level and micro-level functions of these societal sanctions discouraging men to be involved with family and children?