Framing a Domain for Work and Family: A Study of Women in Residential Real Estate Sales Work
By (Author) Carol S. Wharton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
13th October 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Sociology: work and labour
Property and real estate
333.33082
Paperback
174
Width 171mm, Height 228mm, Spine 14mm
277g
Framing a Domain provides fascinating insights into why women choose to sell real estate and why they have come to dominate the profession. Based on in-depth interviews with women realtors, carried out through the 1990s, Carol Wharton's work places this white-collar service occupation within the larger context of women's lives. It offers a unique case study of the gendered practices that infuse the workplace, and the ways women negotiate these practices to successfully weave work with family obligations.
This timely study highlights how white-collar women in the service industry approach work and family objectives in a changing labor market in which contingent work is becoming more common. . . . Wharton's case study of women in real estate sales makes plain the connection between work-family issues and the larger social structure of employment, as she relates women's family experiences to specific occupational features. . . . Anyone interested in case study methods in occupational research will appreciate the broadness and carefulness of her work. * Growing Pains and Progess *
Carol S. Wharton is Associate Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies at the University of Richmond.