Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 152
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅛
978-0-7425-4622-6 • Hardback • April 2006 • $109.00 • (£84.00)
978-0-7425-4623-3 • Paperback • April 2006 • $36.00 • (£28.00)
Oriel Sullivan is a professor in the department of behavioral sciences at Ben Gurion University, Israel.
Part 1 Part I: Changing Theory
Chapter 2 Theorizing Change
Chapter 3 Slow Nature of Change, Slow Change in Theory
Part 4 Part II: Evidence for Change
Chapter 5 The Discursive Context: Attitudes, Language, and Masculinities
Chapter 6 Cross-National Changes in Domestic Labor: Convergence over Time?
Chapter 7 Difference and Change in Domestic Labor between Couples: Some More Equal Than Others?
Part 8 Part III: Changing Gender Relations at Home
Chapter 9 The Intimate Context: Gender Consciousness and Intimacy
Chapter 10 Change at Home: Research Examples and a Framework
Chapter 11 Conclusion: A Project for Change?
Sullivan marshalls persuasive evidence that marriage is in the process of being fundamentally transformed by the changing roles, relations, and negotiations of husbands and wives. Even marriages organized according to the so-called "traditional" male breadwiner/female homemaker division are responding to changing values and expectations. An important contribution to our understanding of modern marriage.
— Stephanie Coontz, author of Marriage, A History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage
This is an extremely important book. Most books treat the family as static: fixed in a moment of time. This book corrects this misleading picture; the family and its members are changing all the time in response to global, economic and cultural forces. Almost uniquely, this text lets us understand how family and gender patterns are changing, and where things might be heading. This book will educate educators as well as students. It should change the way family classes are taught.
— Dr. Pepper Schwartz, professor of sociology, University of Washington; author of The Normal Bar
A significant sociological study of the process of change in domestic gender relations and, through evidence of reciprocal causality, in the larger social sphere....The book is important for all gender scholors across the social sciences and activists who seek to make and understand the processes of large-scale social change.
— Augist 01 2008; Book Review Digest
Oriel Sullivan has addressed an issue of great contemporary interest, and has given us a well-written, well-informed and insightful account of the complex evidence about changing gender relations in family life.....
— R. W. Connell, The University of Sydney
Oriel Sullivan has addressed an issue of great contemporary interest, and has given us a well-written, well-informed andinsightful account of the complex evidence about changing gender relations in family life.
— R. W. Connell, The University of Sydney