We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Still a 'Stalled Revolution'? Work/Family Experiences, Hegemonic Masculinity, and Moving Toward Gender Equality.
- Authors
Friedman, Sarah
- Abstract
Hochschild described the 'stalled revolution' in the late 1980s: women made great gains in labor force opportunities, particularly in stereotypically 'masculine' fields, yet men did not move comparably into 'feminine' roles. This article examines the current 'stalls' in the gender equality movement regarding gendered experiences at work and home, including occupations, the gender wage gap, career trajectories, and the division of household labor. This article also discusses efforts to 'unstall' the gender revolution. Pop culture solutions on the individual-level and academic research on structural/cultural barriers often focus on women's access to historically 'masculine' roles (e.g. representation in STEM fields). There is far less emphasis on men's involvement in historically 'feminine' roles. Gender scholars examine hegemonic masculinity as the narrowly constrained expectations for men's 'appropriate' behavior. While efforts to 'unstall' the gender revolution focus largely on expanding women's opportunities, this article addresses why the gender revolution will remain incomplete and 'stalled' without redefining hegemonic masculinity. Cross-national research demonstrates that changing views of masculinity are critical for greater gender equality at work and home.
- Subjects
WORK family; HOME environment; WORK-life balance; CROSS-cultural differences; FAMILY-work relationship
- Publication
Sociology Compass, 2015, Vol 9, Issue 2, p140
- ISSN
1751-9020
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/soc4.12238