Analysis Of Arlie Hochschild's The Second Shift

1115 Words3 Pages

Arlie Hochschild wrote The Second Shift to bring attention to the demands placed on two parent working households with children. Arlie’s struggle as a woman in her attempt to work, advance in her career and be taken serious while doing so, along with maintaining a home and providing adequate quality time raising a family became apparent with her first child. Hochschild began to take note of peer’s reactions to her bringing her son to the office, the reactions of students, both male and female, and how those people reacted with her. There were noticeable differences in the alterations she was making in her schedule compared to that of her husband, even though he too participated in raising their children. In her observations she notes, “One reason …show more content…

She describes this supermom as a strong, liberated, put together, balanced woman, managing her image, work load, and motherly duties with no hassle. But, when the image is presented to real life working mothers the reality was far from the depiction. The reality was that most households struggle with the after work care of their own homes and families. There is an imbalance of shared duties and the reality of time devoted to work in the home for cleaning, laundry, cooking, and childcare calculated into countless hours that deemed the tasks to equate to working a second shift. The more important task of tending to the children seemed to receive the least amount of dedication and yet it is the most important that should be recognized. Hoschchild notes a study conducted by Alexendar Szalai between 1965-1966 that reflects, “…a random sample of 1,243 working parent showed that working women averaged three hours a day on housework while men averaged seventeen minutes: women spent fifty five minutes a day …exclusively with their children; men spent twelve minutes”

More about Analysis Of Arlie Hochschild's The Second Shift

Open Document