TY - JOUR
T1 - A "major career woman"?
T2 - How women develop early expectations about work
AU - Damaske, Sarah
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by a National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement grant, award no. SES-0703212, and a Woodrow Wilson Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies. The author thanks Dana Britton and the four anonymous reviewers for their exceptionally helpful and detailed comments and critiques. Additional thanks go to Kathleen Gerson, Richard Arum, Jenifer Bratter, Adrianne Frech, Lynne Haney, Heather Jacobson, Kristen Schultz Lee, and Gretchen Webber for their insightful comments on prior drafts and to John Mollenkopf for his help with the NYC Voter Registration Database.
PY - 2011/8
Y1 - 2011/8
N2 - Using data from 80 in-depth qualitative interviews with women randomly sampled from New York City, I ask: how do women develop expectations about their future workforce participation? Using an intersectional approach, I find that women's expectations about workforce participation stem from gendered, classed, and raced ideas of who works full-time. Socioeconomic status, race, gender, and sexuality influenced early expectations about work and the process through which these expectations developed. Women from white and Latino working-class families were evenly divided in their expectations about their future workforce participation, while the vast majority of white, Asian, African American, and Latina middle-class women expected to work continually as adults. Unlike their working-class white and Hispanic peers, all of the working-class Black respondents developed expectations that they would work continuously as adults. The intersections of race, class, and gender play a central role in shaping women's expectations about their participation in paid work.
AB - Using data from 80 in-depth qualitative interviews with women randomly sampled from New York City, I ask: how do women develop expectations about their future workforce participation? Using an intersectional approach, I find that women's expectations about workforce participation stem from gendered, classed, and raced ideas of who works full-time. Socioeconomic status, race, gender, and sexuality influenced early expectations about work and the process through which these expectations developed. Women from white and Latino working-class families were evenly divided in their expectations about their future workforce participation, while the vast majority of white, Asian, African American, and Latina middle-class women expected to work continually as adults. Unlike their working-class white and Hispanic peers, all of the working-class Black respondents developed expectations that they would work continuously as adults. The intersections of race, class, and gender play a central role in shaping women's expectations about their participation in paid work.
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U2 - 10.1177/0891243211412050
DO - 10.1177/0891243211412050
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79961153521
SN - 0891-2432
VL - 25
SP - 409
EP - 430
JO - Gender and Society
JF - Gender and Society
IS - 4
ER -