Earning More and Getting Less
240 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:06 Sep 2005
ISBN:9780813536798
CA$48.95 Back Order
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Earning More and Getting Less

Why Successful Wives Can't Buy Equality

Rutgers University Press
For nearly two decades the wage gap between men and women has remained virtually unchanged. Women continue to earn, on average, 80 cents for every dollar that men earn. Yet despite persistent discrimination in wages, studies are also beginning to show that a growing number of women are out-earning their husbands. Nationwide, nearly one-third of working women are the chief breadwinners in their families. The trend is particularly pronounced among the demographic of highly educated women. Does this increase in earnings, however, equate to a shift in power dynamics between husbands and wives?

In Earning More and Getting Less, sociologist Veronica Jaris Tichenor shows how, historically, men have derived a great deal of power over financial and household decisions by bringing home all (or most) of the family's income. Yet, financial superiority has not been a similar source of power for women. Tichenor demonstrates how wives, instead of using their substantial incomes to negotiate more egalitarian relationships, enable their husbands to perpetuate male dominance within the family.

Weaving personal accounts, in-depth interviews, and compelling narrative, this important study reveals disturbing evidence that the conventional power relations defined by gender are powerful enough to undermine hierarchies defined by money. Earning More and Getting Less is essential reading in sociology, psychology, and family and gender studies.
Tichenor's research sheds light on the inner workings of families and helps us clearly see the power of gender ideology and to understand how and why women's higher earnings can be a liability rather than a resource. This book adds insights not available in similar treatments. Beth Anne Shelton, professor of sociology, University of Texas at Arlington
Tichenor provides another slam dunk against a simple purely materialist explanation for male privilege in marriage. She shows us that even though money matters, women need an ideology of equality to draw upon to negotiate fairness in marriage. Feminist ideology is as necessary to social justice in the twenty-first century as in the past. Gender as a structure of inequality is alive and well in many American marriages. Barbara Risman, co-chair, Council on Contemporary Families
Veronica Jaris Tichenor is an assistant professor in the department of sociology at the State Univeristy of New York-Institute of Technology. She lives in the Mohawk Valley region of upstate New York.
Higher-earning wives : swimming against the tide
Thinking about gender and power in marriage
Gendered bargain : why wives can't trade their money for housework
Dollar rich and power poor : why wives don't control the money
Calling the shots : why wives' decision-making power is limited
Negotiating identity and power
Are they happy? : managing tensions and disappointments
Floating along for the ride? : higher-earning wives and the prospects for gender change
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