From Working Daughters to Working Mothers : Production and Reproduction in an Industrial Community

Dublin Core

Title

From Working Daughters to Working Mothers : Production and Reproduction in an Industrial Community

Description

From the author: "The increased participation of women in the paid labor force in the 20th-century United States has been marked by a transition from an era of 'working daughters' to one of 'working mothers.' Using data from a New England industrial community, I trace the connection between this transition and the growth and decline of the textile industry, the incorporation of immigrants into a hierarchical production process, and family strategies for allocating productive and reproductive labor. While the era of working daughters left the allocation of reproductive labor (housework and child care) intact, the wage work of recent immigrant mothers has had a more profound impact on families by reallocating some of 'women's work.' Nevertheless, many families have continued to maintain an ideology that values the husband's authority, emphasizes respect for parents, and stresses differences between men and women, all of these in the face of considerable changes in actual behavior."

Creator

Lamphere, Louise

Date

1986 February

Language

en

Type

Journal Article

Identifier

Coverage

1900-1986; Rhode Island

Contribution Form

Online Submission

No

Zotero

Issue

#1

Pages

118-130

Volume

13

Journal Article/Article dans un revue Item Type Metadata

Files

Collection

Geolocation

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