Gender, Family and Economy
The Triple Overlap
- Rae Lesser Blumberg - University of Virginia, Charlottesville, USA, University of California, San Diego, USA, University of Wisconsin, USA
September 2012 | 312 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
The 'triple overlap' refers to the link between gender stratification, the household and economic variables. In this volume, leading sociologists examine this overlap as a totality, providing theoretical concepts and new research on how the triple overlap works, both inside the family and within the broader context of society. Their competing conceptions of the interrelationship of gender, family and economy are bolstered by empirical papers which raise questions of culture, class and race within the contexts of both the developed and developing worlds. Six of the articles in this volume were previously published as a Special Issue of Journal of Family Issues.
PART ONE: THEORIES ILLUMINATING THE `TRIPLE OVERLAP'
Joan Huber
A Theory of Family, Economy, and Gender
Randall Collins
Women and Men in the Class Structure
Janet Saltzman Chafetz
The Gender Division of Labor and the Reproduction of Female Disadvantage
PART TWO: THEORIES AND DATA FROM THIRD WORLD PEOPLES
Rae Lesser Blumberg
Income Under Female Versus Male Control
Diane L Wolf
Female Autonomy, the Family, and Industrialization in Java
Cathy A Rakowski
Gender, Family, and Economy in a Planned, Industrial City
Evelyn Nakano Glenn
Racial Ethnic Women's Labor
Rae Lesser Blumberg
Afterword
PART THREE: CONTRASTING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF THE HOUSEHOLD
Judith Treas
The Common Pot or Separate Purses? A Transaction Cost Interpretation
Immanuel Wallerstein and Joan Smith
Households as an Institution of the World-Economy
PART FOUR: GENDER, MONEY, AND HOUSEWORK
Marion Tolbert Coleman
The Division of Household Labor
Philip Blumstein and Pepper Schwartz
Money and Ideology
Sarah Fenstermaker, Candace West and Don Zimmerman
Gender Inequality