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New Survey Confirms Men Do Fair Share of Household Work
CNSNews ^ | 4/10/02 | Glenn J. Sacks

Posted on 04/10/2002 9:42:17 AM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection

Men are doing at least as much household work as women, according to a new survey conducted by the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research (ISR), the world's largest academic survey and research organization.

The recently released study shows that women do an average of 27 hours of housework a week, compared to 16 hours a week for men. Balanced against this, however, is the study's less-publicized finding that the average man spends 14 hours a week more on the job than the average woman. Thus men's overall contribution to the household is actually slightly higher than women's.

In fact, studies conducted by the ISR and others have found that rough equality between the workloads shouldered by men and women has existed for at least four decades. Gender issues author Warren Farrell says that these findings belie the misconception that our era is that of "the second shift woman and the shiftless man."

As Farrell notes, negative references to men and housework litter our popular culture. "The Myth of Male Housework: For Women, Toil Looms From Sun to Sun" wrote one major publication, over a cartoon depicting a woman juggling (and struggling) with a baby, a roasted turkey, and a house pet, while her husband watches TV and "juggles" his beer and his potato chips. Other major publications have highlighted women's burdens under headlines such as "For Women, Having It All May Mean Doing It All," and "The Trouble with Men," with one even commenting, "A woman's work is never done, a man is drunk from sun to sun."

According to Farrell, the idea of the "second shift woman and the shiftless man" was brought into vogue in part by UC Berkeley professor Arlie Hochschild's best-selling 1989 book The Second Shift. In it she wrote (and much of the media uncritically repeated) that "women work an extra month of 24 hour days each year." But Hochschild's research and conclusions were deeply flawed. For the most part she compared the housework burdens of full-time employed males with those of part-time employed females, portraying men working 50 hour weeks as lazy and selfish for not doing as much housework as their wives who were working a 20 hour week.

Hochschild also claimed that men did no more housework in the late 1980s than in the pre-feminist era, but, with one minor exception, she used data on male housework from studies done in the pre-feminist era, rendering it worthless. In addition, the book also defined "housework" to include chores usually done by women, ignoring most of the household tasks generally done by men.

The "second shift" myth also stems from the idea that today both husband and wife work what is presumed to be a 40 hour week, but when both go home at five, the woman does housework and the man does little. Gloria Steinem, in fact, says that in today's economy men have one job, but women have two. In reality, while some couples' economic lives conform to the 40-40 model, the average full-time employed man works eight hours a week more than the full-time employed woman, women are four times as likely as men to work part-time, and women are much more likely than men to be full-time homemakers. Housework burdens naturally reflect this.

Feminists correctly note that, as a general rule, both men and women list housework as one of their least enjoyable tasks and, since women do more housework than men, this shifts the advantage to men. However, while people may not enjoy cooking or folding the laundry in and of themselves, they are usually much happier at home and in casual dress (and perhaps talking on the phone or watching TV while they work), than they are in a supervised and regimented work environment. Also, while housework may seem like drudgery compared to middle-class white collar jobs, it doesn't when compared to blue collar or "pink collar" work.

In addition, both the ISR survey and The Second Shift count only hours worked, without noting the special contributions of men who do dangerous and physically demanding work. Of the 25 most dangerous jobs listed by the US Department of Labor, men comprise at least 90% of the labor force in all of them. According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, nearly 50 American workers are injured every minute of the 40-hour work week, and every day 17 die--16 of them male.

Despite the withering criticism men have endured, it is clear that men are doing their fair share in the home, and have been since before the feminist era.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: housework

1 posted on 04/10/2002 9:42:17 AM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
Thanks for the article bump.
2 posted on 04/10/2002 9:58:56 AM PDT by FairWitness
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
They didn't call MY house! Where can I trade mu hubby in for one of these houseworking men???
3 posted on 04/10/2002 10:17:58 AM PDT by Jewels1091
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To: Jewels1091
Just out of curiosity, who does the yard work around your house? I saw a survey one time that ignored this whole part of the equation, even though the men spent almost as much time doing yard work and maintenance as the women spent cooking, cleaning, etc.
4 posted on 04/10/2002 10:57:43 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: webstersII
"Just out of curiosity, who does the yard work around your house?"

And who maintains the automobiles? Who checks out that noise in the garage at O dark thirty? Who does the reloading after family nights at the target range? All pointless questions in the traditional household where the woman cooks dinners and does the greater share of the baby maintenance.

I never liked treating domestic chores like some kind of a contest. It's the quickest way to marital disharmony. But men still need to be better armed with the facts when the feminist "lazy man" stereotype propaganda rears its butt ugly head, as it always does.

5 posted on 04/10/2002 11:24:06 AM PDT by Harrison Bergeron
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To: technochick99
grinning from ear-to-ear ping.
6 posted on 04/10/2002 11:25:54 AM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: webstersII
What a joke. My husband, in general, is not handy around the house in any capacity but as an "ornament" :). If anything gets done around the house, I do it.
7 posted on 04/10/2002 11:28:35 AM PDT by SarahW
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To: SarahW
I have to check out the noise at o-dark-thirty, because I am the one in the house who's been rabies-proofed. I will give the automobiles, though. I live under the delusion that my car is a special car that never needs oil. But for DH, and his odd urge to clean and maintain the cars, I would be driving a blue-smoking car with "wash me" written in the dust, with half-flat tires, and two thousand auto-bots in the back seat.
8 posted on 04/10/2002 11:33:38 AM PDT by SarahW
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To: Harrison Bergeron
"Just out of curiosity, who does the yard work around your house?"

And who maintains the automobiles?

You go, guy!

And who maintains the computers and networking hardware? And who opens the new jar of pickles? And who empties the mousetrap? And who mans the grill? And who strings the outdoor Christmas lights, and puts the star on the tree?

I tell you, Hercules had it easy.

9 posted on 04/10/2002 11:43:53 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
Of the 25 most dangerous jobs listed by the US Department of Labor, men comprise at least 90% of the labor force in all of them

Obviously the DoL is screwy. The job "prostitute" is mostly done by women, and it must be one of the most dangerous jobs!

10 posted on 04/10/2002 11:49:28 AM PDT by VeritatisSplendor
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To: webstersII
he mows, he put in automatic sprinklers so he doesn't have to work with watering..but I do ALL the garden work, and we have an above ground pool, and I take care of that too including the scrubbing in the spring and throughout the season. And I don't even get in it!! I had to PAY a college kid last summer to paint the trim on the house!
11 posted on 04/10/2002 12:14:51 PM PDT by Jewels1091
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To: Physicist
And who maintains the computers and networking hardware? And who opens the new jar of pickles? And who empties the mousetrap? And who mans the grill? And who strings the outdoor Christmas lights, and puts the star on the tree?

That would be me...not my husband.

12 posted on 04/10/2002 12:16:32 PM PDT by Jewels1091
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To: webstersII
Please! Give me a vacuum cleaner and a dishwasher instead of a bunch of tools for doing brake jobs, oil changes, painting, gardening, lawn mowing, cutting down trees, trimming headges, and so forth. And who changes the tire when you get a flat on some dark, wet, windy road?
13 posted on 04/10/2002 12:24:03 PM PDT by DennisR
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To: SarahW
He might be the exception rather than the rule. Most of the men I know do all of the "heavier"-type stuff.
14 posted on 04/10/2002 12:26:26 PM PDT by DennisR
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To: SarahW
Who does the yard work? Car repairs, even it if's just taking them to the mechanic and waiting for hours? House painting and maintenance? Oil changes and lube work? Snow-shoveling? Furniture and appliance moving and repairs? Barbecuing? Spider-killing? Garbage removal? Garage organizing? Fence building?

There are hundreds more things that I do around the house, like installing window hardware, the most-hated of all, that never seem to "count" in these surveys, which seem to be limited to certain parts of the home.

15 posted on 04/10/2002 12:37:31 PM PDT by Bernard Marx
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