Homeownership In The American Dream

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Homeownership in the United States was a crucial part of the American Dream, where Americans sought to have a stake in the prosperity of American by owning property. In this endeavor the gender race structure was shaped. Examining marriage, the fight for personhood, and the effort to reach the standard of whiteness were critical states to achieving homeownership. Where once these were critical to obtaining homeownership in the early 20th century they became diminished through female activism as white, non-whites, immigrants, and blacks fought against the gender race structure. I believe that the state of marriage and personhood was gendered and raced causing property ownership to be gendered and raced as well.
Black anti-lynching activists …show more content…

“Many women of the working and middle classes toiled for wages because their families required the income” (Mona Domosh, 2001). Where the Victorian era had set the standard of womanhood as a wife and mother that stayed home and did her duty, the reality was that many white women had to perform two jobs one which paid a wage and was public, and one that was in the private realm and unpaid. More married white women entered the work force during World War II and had to balance these two entities. Despite having outside work the expectation of white working women to have a home that shaped character and morality for everyone, as dictated by the Victorian ideals, was still in effect.
Nonwhite women, immigrants, and black women in particular have always worked in the public sphere and in the private sphere, and the expectations of their domesticity was not at the same standard established for white married women. In the Ophelia Paquet case, Ophelia’s work was what funded her and her husband’s lifestyle. The court acknowledged that Ophelia was, “a good and faithful wife” (Pascoe, 1994). Ophelia fulfilled the role of wife, but could never gain acceptability or reach the standard of wife or homemaker set by white women because she was not

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