Publication: 'The house belongs to both’: undoing the gendered division of housework
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Reading date
Event date
Start date of the public exhibition period
End date of the public exhibition period
Authors
Advisors
Authors of photography
Person who provides the photography
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis online
Abstract
This article studies 28 dual-income Spanish childless couples who were undoing gender in routine domestic work. We understand ‘undoing gender’ as defined by Deutsch [(2007). Undoing gender. Gender & Society, 21, 106–127, p. 122]: ‘social interactions that reduce gender difference’. The dual-earner couples came from different socio-economic backgrounds and were interviewed in four different Spanish towns in 2011. The analysis shows that resources in a wide sense, time availability, external help, ideas about fairness, and complex gender attitudes are key interdependent factors that can weave together to form different configurations leading to a non-mainstream division of housework. All configurations were based on principles of gender equality: some couples found it fair to have a 50/50 division of domestic work, others a 50/50 division of all work (paid and unpaid); and a third group showed conflicts in practice. These couples’ ways of undoing gender illustrate the external, individual, and couple circumstances under which spouses are able to achieve a non-traditional construction of unpaid work.
Doctoral program
Related publication
Research projects
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MICINN//CSO2010-17811/ES/DECISIONES DE EMPLEO Y FAMILIA EN LA TRANSICION AL PRIMER HIJO EN EUROPA/
Description
Bibliographic reference
Domínguez-Folgueras, Marta; Jurado-Guerrero, Teresa; Botía-Morillas; Carmen & Amigot-Leache, Patricia (2017). ‘The house belongs to both’: undoing the gendered division of housework. Community, Work and Family , 20 (4): 424-443. https://doi.org/10.1080/13668803.2016.1192525. ISSN 1366-8803 (Print), 1469-3615






