Lexington Books
Pages: 356
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-1739-2 • Hardback • March 2008 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-1740-8 • Paperback • March 2008 • $66.99 • (£52.00)
978-1-4616-3430-0 • eBook • March 2008 • $63.50 • (£49.00)
Lara Descartes is assistant professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Connecticut.
Elizabeth Rudd is a research affiliate of the Center for the Ethnography of Everyday Life and research scientist at the University of Washington, Seattle.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 Foreword
Chapter 3 1 Changing Landscapes of Work and Family
Part 4 I Intersections of Work and Family
Chapter 5 2 Working Selves, Moral Selves: Crafting the Good Person in the Northern Plains
Chapter 6 3 Kitchen Conferences and Garage Cubicles: The Merger of Home and Work in a 24-7 Global Economy
Chapter 7 4 'We pass the Baby off at the Factory Gates': Work and Family in the Manufacturing Midwest
Chapter 8 5 The Work-Family Divide for Low-Income African Americans
Chapter 9 6 American Dreaming: Refugees from Corporate Work Seek the Good Life
Chapter 10 7 Patrolling the Boundaries of Childhood in Middle-Class "Ruburbia"
Part 11 II The (Not So) Standard North American Family
Chapter 12 8 Gay Family Values: Gay Co-Father Families in Straight Communities
Chapter 13 9 Black Women have Always Worked: Is There a Work-Family Conflict Among the Black Middle Class?
Chapter 14 10 'It's like Arming Them': African American Mothers' Views on Racial Socialization
Chapter 15 11 Seeing the Baby in the Belly: Family and Kinship at the Ultrasound Scan
Chapter 16 12 Stabilizing Influence: Cultural Expectations of Fatherhood
Chapter 17 13 Focused on the Chinese American Family: Chinese Immigrant Churches and Childrearing
Chapter 18 14 Choosing Chastity: Redefining the Sexual Double Standard in the Language of Choice
Chapter 19 Afterword: What is a Family?
Chapter 20 Contributors
Chapter 21 Credits for the Cover Photos
In this beautifully rendered collection, we peer through so many different windows of American family life. Rural North Dakota parents reverently passing on farm values, if not the farm itself, to their children. Silicon Valley hi-tech family workers share long hours and high hopes in their electronic cottage. Affluent corporate executives and their stay-at-home wives still can't control influences beyond the gates to their communities. Refugees from corporate life set up a small town pie shop hoping to find a better way to mix work and family life. The superb studies gathered here reflect the many ways families are trying to build the American Dream on an ever more eroded and shifting landscape.
— Arlie Hochschild, author of The Commercialization of Intimate Life and The Time Bind
A fresh and engaging set of ethnographic accounts – the reader is quickly immersed in a gallery of diverse and vivid portraits of everyday work and family life. I will be recommending this book to colleagues!
— Kerry Daly, professor and chair, department of family relations and applied nutrition, University of Guelph in Canada
The sheer variety of people and circumstances found in the 13 substantive chapters is striking.
— Robert Drago, Professor LSER & WS, Penn State
Useful for students....Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
This edited collection contributes to the under-researched social reality that middle class families are not monolithic. As a whole this collection of ethnographic studies provides rich portraits of the changing cultural landscape of work and family life.With employment in flux and family membership no longer conventional these authors offer us a fresh look at diversity in the middle of the social class structure. A terrific read this collection will make a wonderful supplement for social sciences work/family courses...
— Rosanna Hertz, Luella LaMer Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies and Chair of Women's Studies at Wellesley College
This edited collection contributes to the under-researched social reality that middle class families are not monolithic. As a whole this collection of ethnographic studies provides rich portraits of the changing cultural landscape of work and family life. With employment in flux and family membership no longer conventional these authors offer us a fresh look at diversity in the middle of the social class structure. A terrific read this collection will make a wonderful supplement for social sciences work/family courses.
— Rosanna Hertz, Luella LaMer Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies and Chair of Women's Studies at Wellesley College
The case studies examined here make this book an informative resource; it could be particularly useful as a course text since many chapters include brief but good scholarly and historical backgrounds, such as histories of working mothers in African American communities and shifting attitudes toward children and parenting in the United States.
— Anthropology of Work Review