THE MAN AS THE SOLE PROVIDER FOR THE FAMILY, WOMEN IN WORKFORCE, AND THE SOCIAL NUANCES IN BETWEEN

THE MAN AS THE SOLE PROVIDER FOR THE FAMILY, WOMEN IN WORKFORCE, AND THE SOCIAL NUANCES IN BETWEEN

For most of written history, agriculture was the chief human occupation, and heavy physical labour was not confined to men. Women performed physically demanding chores such as grinding grain by hand in a stone quern, drawing and carrying water, gathering wood, and churning milk to make butter. Generally, any respite from these tasks would occur only when a woman gave birth.

The Industrial Revolution changed the work situation for both men and women. Whereas the hearth and home had been the centre of production and family life, industrialization changed the locus of work from home to factory. The role of women in the family workforce did not change overnight, however, for at first many families worked together in factories as teams.

Not until the mid-19th century did the role of the male as the “good provider” emerge, with women taking over most household and domestic tasks. This transition may have stemmed from a growing humanitarian protest against the harsh treatment of women and children in the early factory system. Legislation—most notably in Britain—raised the minimum age for child labour in factories, set limits on the working hours of women and children, and barred them from certain dangerous and heavy occupations. Thus, women engaged primarily in domestic tasks such as child care while the men went out to work. Being the sole wage earner in the family reinforced the man’s traditional position as the head of the family.

The traditional role of the housewife (whose chief pursuits were motherhood and domesticity) persisted throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th. The advent of electric power near the close of the 19th century brought labour-saving devices such as washing machines and vacuum cleaners into the home. Although they freed the housewife from some drudgery, these innovations did little to lessen the amount of time she spent on household duties.

Social and economic developments were the critical agents that changed the nature of women’s work. For example, the growth of public education increased the demand for more teachers, and growing industrial and commercial enterprises required more office workers and salespeople. Whereas men had previously performed teaching and clerical tasks, employers found they could hire women for these occupations—at lower salaries.

Differences in pay between the sexes were based largely on the assumption that men had to be paid enough to support a family. Moreover, most women who entered the workforce in the United States before World War II were single and did not have families to support; hence, they could be paid lower wages. This inequality in men’s and women’s pay scales, even for equal work, still exists.

Many working women performed tasks closely related to their traditional household work. When clothes were less often made at home but purchased ready-made at stores, for example, women were hired as seamstresses in the clothing industry.

Even after national emergencies such as the World Wars, during which women were encouraged to take manufacturing jobs to replace the men who were in military service, women returned to housekeeping or to traditionally female occupations such as office work and nursing.

In the 1970s married women began entering the labour force in great numbers, and the strict segregation of women into certain occupations began to lessen somewhat as new opportunities arose for female workers in traditionally male occupations. New technology has meant that many tasks that once required heavy physical exertion, and hence were restricted to men, can now be performed simply by pushing buttons. Operating a bulldozer, for instance, does not need muscle power so much as alertness, judgment, and coordination—qualities as plentiful in women as in men. Nevertheless, the entrance of women into occupations formerly the province of men proved to be slower than expected.

This persistent occupational segregation by sex is largely responsible for sizable differences in rates of pay that still exist. It would appear that, although rapid technological progress has enabled women in highly industrialized countries to cast off certain traditional roles, technological determinism—or technological rationality—does not always prevail over cultural views and social practices inherited from the past.


Source: Britannica

Please note that I didn't write this


What comes to mind after reading this?

Ann Bustamante

Environmental and Sustainability Specialist

12 个月

People used to be in groups for survival. The myth of 'sole' provider is a myth. Evolutionary anthropology demonstrates a theory of male territory guarding, where makes guard a territory with resources where they allow their group to be. That is it really. While women have been busy nurturing in the past, now they must reduce this and act as men while resources become scarce. I'm sorry this is a very long post. I don't usually post like this. I happened to be in the middle of writing an essay on it. Use what you wish. I'm happy to converse. But that is about it for now.

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Ann Bustamante

Environmental and Sustainability Specialist

12 个月

This is unfair to me, women and children. It pressures us all to increase status signally, desperately trying to survive, participate in wage work, production and consumption. I do have a point in withing toward. There narrative of men as sole provider is a story that helps us make meaning of a confusing circumstance and apply it to our lives. It is so costly to have children that people are opting out. Men have only two roles generally, most ordinary people must earn to support themselves and any dependent and to serve in defense of their group whether they want to or not. Women only must support any dependent they take on. Both must survive trauma and esteem.

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Ann Bustamante

Environmental and Sustainability Specialist

12 个月

To share my thoughts I will share some of the outline. This is a most anomalous time for humans and the planet in our population size and our exploitation of resources. We could use these resources in better ways and expend our economic energy in other ways, ie. Valuable reproduction of our species with investment in child rearing. 99% of human existence has been hunter gatherer or agrarian, only the last 75 years had rapidly changed our way of living, our society, way of production and consumption, our family and work-wage structures, our use of resources (without time to regenerate or recover), our technology and our financial systems. Imagine for a moment that we organized ourselves based on watersheds and govern ourselves, collaborate and develop alliances and power based on naturally watersheds and what they can provide all species. In this anomalous time frame, there is a narrative of men that they are sole providers. Since the industrial age, WWII, deep colonization, and the peak of this age from 1950 to 1970, social structures are completely different from past times.

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Ann Bustamante

Environmental and Sustainability Specialist

12 个月

That is an insightful question. I don't have a complete answer. I participate in a workgroup that strategizes these kinds of social and environmental questions. Also, if you are interested in progressive economics I'll share a handful of my favorite resources, you may or may not already be aware of; https://www.ineteconomics.org/ , CASSE. I'm in the midst of writing an outline for a vlog, which is how I came across your question. I was looking for resources in preparing this piece.

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Ann Bustamante

Environmental and Sustainability Specialist

1 年

This seems like a fairly good description on the topic. It is missing one notable consideration, when women have babies, they have to focus much of their energy on that; feeding, caring, and so on, for a being who is unable to survive without. Several years of nurturing interaction is needed for a human to be whole and not traumatized or unsocialized, and this nurturing could be provided by a group of women and perhaps some men. However, in recent history, social demands have taken that away and we have compounded social stressors for adults and children. Nice point.

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