Adaption, Equality and Fairness: Towards a sociological understanding of the ‘supportive husband’
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Adaption, Equality and Fairness : Towards a sociological understanding of the ‘supportive husband’. / Bach, Anna Sofie.
In: Norma: Nordisk tidsskrift for maskulinitetsstudier, 31.08.2016.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaption, Equality and Fairness
T2 - Towards a sociological understanding of the ‘supportive husband’
AU - Bach, Anna Sofie
PY - 2016/8/31
Y1 - 2016/8/31
N2 - Many heterosexual couples today follow a neo-traditional pattern where she has main responsibility for the workings of domestic daily life – but there is also a growing number of couples where her job takes centre stage and he must adapt to that circumstance. This article focuses on the re-organization of gendered meanings prompted in such a situation. Drawing on narrative interviews with 22 men living in partnerships with career women, we investigate the cultural work required to construct intelligible masculine positions and identities when neo-traditional work/family patterns are unsettled. We identify and explore two central adaption narratives among the men: ‘running the family’ and ‘50/50 advocacy’. Both narratives are rendered intelligible using the cultural narrative of the family as a joint-working community and drawing on the egalitarian notion of mutuality. In this re-organization of meaning, the creation of the time-consuming ‘invisible’ work of practical, emotional, and moral domestic responsibilities is made visible, disentangled from the taken-for-granted link to femininity in ways that contribute to the de-gendering of domestic work.
AB - Many heterosexual couples today follow a neo-traditional pattern where she has main responsibility for the workings of domestic daily life – but there is also a growing number of couples where her job takes centre stage and he must adapt to that circumstance. This article focuses on the re-organization of gendered meanings prompted in such a situation. Drawing on narrative interviews with 22 men living in partnerships with career women, we investigate the cultural work required to construct intelligible masculine positions and identities when neo-traditional work/family patterns are unsettled. We identify and explore two central adaption narratives among the men: ‘running the family’ and ‘50/50 advocacy’. Both narratives are rendered intelligible using the cultural narrative of the family as a joint-working community and drawing on the egalitarian notion of mutuality. In this re-organization of meaning, the creation of the time-consuming ‘invisible’ work of practical, emotional, and moral domestic responsibilities is made visible, disentangled from the taken-for-granted link to femininity in ways that contribute to the de-gendering of domestic work.
UR - https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/en/publications/ee378a96-c6f5-46bf-911b-20a55802afe6
U2 - 10.1080/18902138.2016.1217692
DO - 10.1080/18902138.2016.1217692
M3 - Journal article
JO - NORMA
JF - NORMA
SN - 1890-2138
ER -
ID: 289159630