Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 304
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2861-1 • Hardback • December 2004 • $139.00 • (£107.00)
978-0-7425-2862-8 • Paperback • November 2004 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Phyllis Moen holds the McKnight Presidential Chair of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. She is the author of Working Parents and Women's Two Roles and editor of It's About Time: Couples and Careers. She recently served as president of the Eastern Sociological Society. Patricia Roehling is professor and chair of the psychology department at Hope College in Holland, Michigan.
Chapter 1 The Career Mystique
Chapter 2 Learning the Career Mystique: Where Do Values and Expectations Come From?
Chapter 3 Do Young Adults Still Believe in the Career Mystique?
Chapter 4 If Real Work is Paid Work, Can New Parents Follow The Career Mystique?
Chapter 5 Living the Career Mystique: Making It, Giving Up, or Slipping Behind?
Chapter 6 Life Midcourse: Are Retirement or Second Acts Inevitable, Desirable, or Even Possible?
Chapter 7 Policies and Practices: Maintaining the Status Quo or Challenging the Career Mystique?
Chapter 8 Beyond the Career Mystique: Recasting the Lockstep Life Course
In this compelling, clearly written, and well-researched book, Moen and Roehling make the best case I've seen for sustainable careers. If it's good for the environment, why shouldn't we do it for human beings? A powerful idea whose time has come.
— Arlie Hochschild, author of The Commercialization of Intimate Life and The Time Bind
The book provides interesting details, including international examples and excellent references. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Worthy of attention.
— PsycCRITIQUES
Provokes a great deal of reflection in the reader, challenging us to think in new ways about a plethora of interconnected aspects of the social world. An accessible sociological text.
— Work, Employment and Society
The Career Mystique is a chilling account of the mismatch between couples' dreams and changing realities. Whether at work or at home, at any stage of adult life, nothing can be taken for granted anymore. This excellent book led me to conclude that we can no longer be complacent about the crisis we are in as family members and employees.
— Rosanna Hertz, Luella LaMer professor of sociology and women?s studies, Wellesley College
·Names and defines the obsolete myth undergirding of the American Dream
·Shows how even young children learn the career mystique, and how it shapes the goals and strategies of Americans at every life stage.
·Descibes how American men and women manage,given the mismatch between the "rules of the game" based on the career mystique and the uncertainties, ambiguities, and overloads of work — and life — in the 21st century..
·Suggests new workplace flexibilities more in keeping with today's, not yesterday's, workforce