Read The Second Shift: Working Families and the Revolution at Home Online
Authors: Anne Machung Arlie Hochschild
described, 4
and divorce, 207-12
extra workload of, 4, 7-10, 14, 20-21, 22, 30, 246, 248, 254, 265, 270, 272
and gender ideologies, 41-42, 154, 190-92
and gender roles, 104
hired help for, 196-97 (
see also
baby-sitters and day-care workers; housekeepers)
and housework sharing, 175
impact on men, 7-8
men’s participation in (
see specific individuals
)
origin of term, 7
personal meanings of, 188
research on, 3, 271-78
and supermom strategies, 33
women’s strategies for, 192-97
self-care children, 227, 260
self-esteem, 4, 41, 42
separations, 44, 139-40
service sector jobs, 216, 237, 250
Sex and the Single Girl
(Brown), 26
sex life
and children, 165-66
and the Delacortes, 67
and the Holts, 43-44, 46, 50, 189
and indirect strategies, 193
and the Steins, 124-25, 189
Shaevitz, Marjorie Hansen, 27-28
Shaevitz, Mort, 27-28
Sherman, Adrienne, 174-81
and child care, 156
and cultural pressures, 240
and direct approaches, 192
and divorce, 205-6
and economic pressures, 218
and generational changes, 257
and negotiation of housework, 252
retirement, 261
Sherman, Michael
and career tensions, 205-6
and child care, 156-57, 228
and economic logic of gender roles, 217, 218, 223
and fatherhood, 181, 186, 187, 224-25
and gender strategies, 197
and housework sharing, 7, 173-81, 213, 214, 215
retirement, 261
and second shift work, 189
Sims, Dan, 20
Sims, Dorothy, 19-20, 21
Sims, Timothy, 20
single parenthood, 133, 230, 248-49
sleep deprivation, 10, 20, 162, 263-64, 279n2
social class.
See
class, social
Soviet Union, 24-25, 208, 259
Spitze, Glenna, 210-11
Staines, Graham, 208
Stein, Jessica
and children’s behaviors, 123-24
and class issues, 241
and cultural pressures, 240
and domestic help, 116-17, 121-23
and economic pressures, 189
family life described, 111-16
and gender strategies, 124-28
and gratitude, 118-19, 128
and marital tensions, 11, 201, 202, 208
and nurturance, 119-20
Stein, Seth
and child care, 123-24, 156, 254
and class issues, 241
and domestic help, 116-17, 121-23
and economic pressures, 189
family life described, 111-15
and gender ideology, 130, 190
and gender strategies, 124-27
and gratitude, 118-19, 128
and housework sharing, 173, 213
and marital tensions, 11, 201, 202, 208
and nurturance, 119-20
sacrifices of, 180
and second shift work, 189
and workplace pressures, 180
Stein, Victor, 112, 114, 116-17, 119-24, 255
Stein, Walter, 114, 120, 123-24, 255
Steinem, Gloria, 66, 68-69
stress, 138-39, 167-68, 216, 263
superdad(s), 17, 162, 197
superkid(s), 226-27
supermom(s)
and black women, 24
and Carol Alston, 147
and child-care standards, 225-26
critiques of, 29-30
and cultural images, 22-33, 32-33
and division of labor, 94
emotional cost of, 59-60
as gender strategy, 194
image, 22-23
language of, 55
and the Livingstons, 162, 194
motivations for, 13
parodies of, 29-30
and role models, 22
and social changes, 251-52
and Soviet women, 24-25
stereotype image of, 1
and women’s careers, 99
The Superwoman Syndrome
(Shaevitz), 27-28, 29
Sweden, 208, 268
Szalai, Alexander, 3, 4
Tanagawa, Alexandra, 79-82, 84, 87-88, 90-91
Tanagawa, Diane, 79-80, 81
Tanagawa, Nina
career of, 81-88, 91-95, 144, 249
and changes in the workplace, 250
and concerns with children, 90-91
and cultural pressures, 240
and divorce, 88-90, 203
and economic logic of gender roles, 218
family life described, 77-78
and family myths, 81, 127-28
and gender strategies, 78-81, 147, 194, 199, 200
and generational changes, 235
and housework sharing, 109, 188
illnesses, 84, 193
Tanagawa, Nina (
cont.
)
and indirect approaches, 193
and leisure gap, 197
and marital pressures, 246-47
Tanagawa, Peter
and changes in the workplace, 250
and concerns with children, 90-91
and cultural change, 250
and divorce, 88-90, 203
earnings, 130
and economic logic of gender roles, 218
family life described, 77-78
and family myths, 81, 127-28
and gender ideology, 190
and gender strategies, 78-81, 112, 125, 147, 198-200, 252
and gratitude, 84-86, 118
and housework sharing, 103, 147, 154, 173, 215
sacrifices of, 180
and second shift work, 188
and workplace pressures, 81-88, 93-95
Thoits, Peggy, 4
traditional gender ideology
and the Alstons, 154-55
and comparison groups, 52
and the Delacortes, 61-71, 71-73, 73-76, 193, 199, 205
described, 15-17
and the domestic heritage, 243
and gender strategies, 188
and high-earning women, 216
and the Judsons, 140
and marital tensions, 201, 204-5
and the Myersons, 102
and patriarchal families, 205-7
transitional gender ideology
described, 15-17
and the domestic tradition, 243
and the Holts, 58
and the Judsons, 132, 140
and male share of housekeeping, 75, 276, 282-83n1
and marital tensions, 201, 204
repercussions of, 8
and the Tanagawas, 77, 83
and women’s careers, 83, 94
Trudeau, Gary, 200
True
magazine, 239
unemployment and underemployment among African Americans, 23-24
and family relationships, 266
and the Holts, 42
of men, 219-20, 223, 227
and race issues, 251
UNESCO, 266-67
unmarried couples, 5, 52
urbanization, 235-39
US Bureau of Labor Statistics, 141
Vanek, Joan, 25
wages and income.
See also
economic pressures
and the Alstons, 145
and changes in the workplace, 237, 250
and cultural pressures, 23
and economic logic of gender roles, 217-24, 219-21
and family myths, 127-28
and gender ideologies, 85-86
and gender strategies, 135
and housework sharing, 215-17
and income disparity, 14, 23, 130,
179, 243-47, 248
and the Judsons, 130
and leisure gap, 277-78
limits of economic logic, 217-24
and women’s careers, 85-87
“A Week Like Any Other”
(Baranskaya), 24-25
Welter, Barbara, 236-37
Western Europe, 3
Whipple, Thomas, 26
Williams, Joan, 141
Wilson, Katherine, 229-30
Winfield, Adam, 181, 228, 234, 255
Winfield, Art
and child care, 156-57, 181-85
and economic logic of gender roles, 218, 222, 223
and fatherhood, 181-85, 186, 187
and gender strategies, 197, 199
and housework sharing, 7, 213, 214, 215
Winfield, Julia, 182-83, 184
Woman on a Seesaw
(Cosell), 30
Women and Love
(Hite), 13
women’s movement, 5, 68, 181, 269.
See also
feminism
working hours, rise in, xiv-xv
Working Woman Book
(Dale and Dale), 29
working women
anxiety suffered by, 4
backstage support lacking for, 247-49
and class issues, 241-42
and control over time, 281n1
cultural image of, 23-34, 85-86, 106-10, 180-81, 200, 202-3, 205-7, 239-41, 255-56, 264 (
see also
supermom(s))
earnings of, 95, 103, 141, 145, 215-17, 217-24, 243-47, 257, 277-78
emotional health of, 4
extra workload of, 9-10
in full-time jobs, 2-3
hours worked by, 288n4
and housewives, 248-49
and job stress, 136-38, 216-17
and multitasking, 9
numbers of, 2-3, 12n
and preservation of domestic traditions, 242-43
research on children of, 242-43
and sleep deprivation, 10
in the Soviet Union, 24-25
trends since the 1950s, 2-3
as urbanized peasant, 235-39
workplace roles of, 9
workplace environment, 12, 14, 19, 23, 259, 268