Division of Labor

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Division of Labor

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Men do tasks that involved greater personal discretion and more likely to have ... Men's participation increases when wives not available to do it. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Division of Labor


1
Division of Labor
  • Physical work and symbolic meanings attached to
    work done in the household
  • In U.S., defined as the private
    spheretraditionally associated with women and
    unpaid labor
  • Split from the public spheretraditionally
    associated with men and paid labor, real work
  • Separate spheres doctrine developed with the rise
    of western capitalism, industrialization,
    urbanization and the creation of the middle class

2
Defining household labor
  • What gets measured as labor? Definitions of
    household labor not always agreed upon
  • Houseworkcleaning, cooking, paying bills
  • Both inside/outside house?
  • Necessity versus leisure (barbecuingcooking or
    recreation)?
  • Child care
  • Emotion workemotional care for others

3
Measuring household labor
  • Different sociological methods get different
    results
  • Time budget studies how much time do people
    spend on which tasks?
  • Self-report ask them to keep diaries of
    activities ask them to estimate on an
    hourly--daily, weekly basis ask one member to
    estimate other members time spent (wife to
    husband, husband to wife)
  • Detached observation observe them as they spend
    time (detached observation)

4
Gender differences in tasks
  • Household labor highly gendered with stereotypes
    matching researchwomen do inside labor, men do
    outside labor
  • Tasks are sex-segregated
  • Women do more housework than menin 1995 women
    spent 17.5 hours a week (excluding child care),
    men averaged ten hours a week.
  • Women do 80 of child care.
  • Ethnic differences African American men do more
    household labor than white men except in
    traditional mens labor (outdoor, auto, bills).
    Less stigma to women working outside home
    (historical necessities).

5
Generational changes
  • Decreasing gender gap in household labor between
    women and men1965 women averaged more than six
    times hours spent in housework than men, 1995 1.8
    times hours of men
  • Longitudinal research shows women spending fewer
    hours doing household labor today than forty
    years ago, men doing more child care
  • Women who work for pay do fewer hours of
    household work than full-time homemakers, and
    women part-time workers do less household work
    than full-time workers (p. 136?!)
  • Women not spending less time in child caretaking
    time out of doing housework

6
Womens Second Shift
  • Arlie Hochschilds ethnographic study of
    household labor she called The Second Shift
    because women work two jobsemployed and at home.
  • She estimated women spent 15 hours a week more
    than men on housework, meant working an extra
    month of 24 hour days a year than men
  • Men do tasks that involved greater personal
    discretion and more likely to have fixed
    beginning and end (changing oil on car) women do
    tasks of everyday necessity (cooking) with
    childrenmen do interactive tasks (playing) women
    do custodial
  • Hochschild found differences between individual
    and family gender ideologies and actual
    practicesdeveloped family myths to account for
    discrepancies.
  • Criticism for overgeneralizing from too small
    sample, discounting generational change

7
Relative resource theory
  • The resources that a person brings to family
    determines amount of housework timemore resource
    (paid work income) less time spent with converse
    true.
  • Wives do less housework and men do more as the
    proportion of family income contributed by the
    wife increases (Bianchi, Schwartz and Blumstein).
  • When wives are same age as husbands, they do less
    housework and husbands do more than when wives
    are two or more years younger.
  • Criticismhow are these negotiations accomplished?

8
Time studies
  • Amount of time spent on tasks determined by time
    availability affected by children and employment
    demands
  • Children increase the hours women spend
    performing housework more than mens housework
    hours. Mens participation increases when wives
    not available to do it.
  • Earlier research shows divorced women with
    children doing less housework than married women
    suggesting presence of men increases amount of
    housework women do.

9
Family Types
  • Blumstein/Schwartz study that looked at four
    types of householdheterosexual married,
    heterosexual cohabiting, gay male, lesbian, found
    married women performed more housework than
    cohabiting women.
  • No differences found between married and
    cohabiting men.
  • Gay and lesbian households more egalitarian
    although person who brought home more money had
    more power.

10
Interactionist theory
  • What meanings do individuals give to actual work
    done?
  • People do not give the same meanings to household
    labor that they give to paid labor.
  • Do beliefs produce activities or do activities
    produce beliefs?
  • Parents in families where housework/childcare
    shared view women and men as more similar than in
    households with less equity where sexes viewed as
    more different.

11
Household roles
  • Household roles and ideologies about them develop
    in relation to economic changes. Differ by
    society, history, culture
  • In Europe and U.S., with Industrial Revolution
    men went into industrialized workforce and became
    breadwinner, women went into unpaid household
    labor in middle classes and became nurturer
    children became more dependents less
    workers/miniature adults.

12
Mother role
  • What makes a good mother? A bad one? Depends
    on culture, diversity in ideologies and practices
  • Western feminist critique compulsory
    motherhoodwomen should have kids and take care
    of them. Conservatives critique this critique as
    anti-family or anti-mother.
  • Social class differences--McMahon studyworking
    class women saw motherhood as entrance into adult
    status middle class saw motherhood as an
    accomplishment after establishing career as
    marker of adult status, affected timing of
    childbirth
  • Afrocentric ideology of motherhood--Importance of
    Black Othermothers (fictive kin) and
    Women-centered networks of social care extends
    meaning of mothering beyond individual family
    into community mothering (Hill Collins)

13
Motherhood wage penalty
  • Role conflicts between paid work and unpaid
    family labor for women. Assumption that mothers
    not good employees, not ideal workers
  • Employed mothers earn less than non-mothers.
    Estimate wage penalty of about 7 per child.
  • Women lose seniority and work experience as
    mothers. Less time at work, less energy for
    work. Explains only 1/3 of wage penalty.
    Accounting for similar experience/seniority,
    mothers earn 4 less than non-mothers.
  • Mothers choose jobs that are mother-friendly
    flexible schedules, on-site childcare etc.
  • Employers discriminate against mothers, believe
    mothers less committed to jobs thus treat them
    differently than non-mothers (dont promote, keep
    and justify lower salaries, etc).

14
Father role
  • What makes a good father? A bad one?
  • Can we disentangle breadwinner role from father
    role? Role conflict or role support for
    fatherhood in relation to ideal worker myth.
  • Kanter Married men bring two people to the job,
    while married women bring less than one.
    Assumption that married fathers have wives to do
    their work for them (pick up the slack and/or
    contribute to work outcomes?)

15
Mens marriage benefit
  • 1992 study 4000 male college profs
    never-married men had lowest salaries, followed
    by men with employed wives, highest salaries and
    achievement levels were men with nonemployed
    wives.
  • With employed wives men earned 1000 more a year
    than never-married men with non-employed wives
    earned 2000 more than never-married.

16
His/Her marriage
  • Sociologist Jessie Bernard in 1972 argued
    different relationship to marriage for women and
    menhis marriage was not like her marriage.
  • Shock theory of marriagemarriage more a shock
    for women than men because women give up more
    independence (lose name), more likely to
    accommodate, more likely to get distressed be
    less happy. Todaysingle men less healthy than
    single or married women. Whose benefits?
  • Power theory of marriage those with greater
    resources tend to have more power in the
    relationship and the corollary.

17
Gay families
  • Challenge to heteronormative conceptions of
    family
  • Conservatives dont recognize legitimacy rights
    of gay parents. U.S. Defense of Marriage Act only
    recognizes marriage between heterosexuals.
  • What about where there are two women mothers?
    One biological and one fictive, or two
    non-biological fathers?
  • Gay couples share more time together and share
    more interests
  • More egalitarian because less gender scripted by
    social gender norms
  • Research shows kids of gay parents no more likely
    to be gay than kids of straight parents.
  • Problems are discrimination against gays and
    their kids.

18
Raising Gender-Aschematic Children
  • Psychologist Sandra Bem says we should seek to
    raise gender-aschematic kids to undermine the
    dominant gender ideologies and stereotypes
  • Thinks kids should be taught biology of sex in
    terms of anatomy and reproduction to undermine
    stereotypical cultural correlates of sex as
    definitional of gender (p. 154)
  • Teach about variability of individuals within
    groups as compared with small mean differences
    between groups
  • Teach cultural relativism and consequences of sex
    discrimination

19
References
  • Wharton, Chapter 5
  • Philip Blumstein Pepper Schwartz, American
    Couples (1983)
  • Arlie Hochschild, The Second Shift (1989)
  • Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought
    (2000)
  • Abigail Garner, Families Like Mine Children of
    Gay Parents Tell It Like It Is (2004)
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