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Inventing the Working Parent: Work, Gender, and Feminism in Neoliberal Britain

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Inventing the Working Parent: Work, Gender, and Feminism in Neoliberal Britain

Contributors:

By (Author) Sarah E. Stoller

ISBN:

9780262546102

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

26th September 2023

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social and cultural history
Gender studies: women and girls
Social and cultural anthropology

Dewey:

306.8740941

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

304

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

The first historical examination of working parenthood in the late twentieth century-and how the concepts of "family-friendly" work culture and "work-life balance" came to be. Since the 1980s, families across the developed West have lived through a revolution on a scale unprecedented since industrialization. With more mothers than ever before in paid work and the rise of the middle-class, dual-income household, we have entered a new era in the history of everyday life- the era of the working parent. In Inventing the Working Parent, Sarah E. Stoller charts the politics that shaped the creation of the phenomenon of working parenthood in Britain as it arose out of a new culture of work. Stoller begins with the first sustained efforts by feminists to mobilize politically on behalf of working parents in the late 1970s and concludes in the context of an emerging national political agenda for working families with the rise of New Labour in the 1990s. She explores how and why the notion of working parenthood emerged as a powerful new political claim and identity category and addresses how feminists used the concept of working parenthood to advocate for new organizational policies and practices. Lastly, Stoller shows how neoliberal capitalism under Margaret Thatcher and subsequent New Labour governments made a family's ability to survive on one income nearly impossible-with significant consequences for individual experience, the gendered division of labor, and intimate life.

Author Bio

Sarah E. Stoller is a historian and freelance writer. Her writing on care work, feminism, gender, and motherhood as well as popular culture and the crisis of higher education has appeared in Slate, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Aeon Magazine, Salon, Jezebel, the Washington Post, and History Workshop Journal.

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