Gendered Resources, Division of Housework, and Perceived Fairness-A Case in Urban China

Drawing upon equity and gender theories, we investigate Chinese couples' perceived fairness of the wife's disproportionately heavy household responsibility. Data come from in-depth interviews with 39 married couples in Beijing during the summer of 1998. Although housework division remained...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of marriage and family 2001-11, Vol.63 (4), p.1122-1133
Hauptverfasser: Zuo, Jiping, Bian, Yanjie
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container_title Journal of marriage and family
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creator Zuo, Jiping
Bian, Yanjie
description Drawing upon equity and gender theories, we investigate Chinese couples' perceived fairness of the wife's disproportionately heavy household responsibility. Data come from in-depth interviews with 39 married couples in Beijing during the summer of 1998. Although housework division remained unequal among dual-earner couples, the majority of wives and husbands saw it as fair. We explore the notion of gendered resources by examining husbands' and wives' opinions about both paid and domestic work. We find that husband's breadwinner role and wife's housekeeper role retain their primary place in the family and that gender-role expectations produce gendered resources to both wives and husbands. These expectations release both the husbands, who have fulfilled the provider role, from the obligation to share housework equally, and the wives, who combine paid and domestic work, from an equal responsibility of breadwinning. Therefore, the failure to bring adequate gendered resources to a marriage, rather than the unequal distribution of housework, causes a sense of unfairness.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01122.x
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects China
Couples
Culture
Economic resources
Equity
Fairness
Family Roles
Family studies
Gender equality
Gender roles
gendered resources
Housekeeping
Housework
Husbands
Interpersonal relations
Marital Stability
Marriage
Men
Peking, Peoples Republic of China
perceived fairness
Sex Roles
Sexual Division of Labor
Sexuality. Marriage. Family relations
Social research
Sociology
Sociology of the family. Age groups
Spouses
Urban areas
urban Chinese couples
Wives
Working women
title Gendered Resources, Division of Housework, and Perceived Fairness-A Case in Urban China
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