Single Women/Family Ties: Life Histories of Older WomenSAGE Publications, 1989 M07 1 - 152 pages This important qualitative study illuminates lifelong single women's contributions to family development in relation to their widowed peers. Allen examines the social and historical contexts of the women's childhoods, their experiences as young adults and the processes leading to their being single or married. Midlife variations in family caregiving experiences and the meaning of being single in old age are also discussed. |
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Page 32
... arguments by suggesting that the modern family , as a private self - supporting nuclear unit , was created by the state in the liberal and welfare phases of its history . Piven ( 1985 ) argues that the state is not as invasive in the ...
... arguments by suggesting that the modern family , as a private self - supporting nuclear unit , was created by the state in the liberal and welfare phases of its history . Piven ( 1985 ) argues that the state is not as invasive in the ...
Page 35
... argues that the dual career model falsely assumes that only middle - class women work for psychological reasons . Qualitative studies of married working - class women ( see also Dabrowski , 1983 ; Ferree , 1984 ; Rubin , 1976 ) present ...
... argues that the dual career model falsely assumes that only middle - class women work for psychological reasons . Qualitative studies of married working - class women ( see also Dabrowski , 1983 ; Ferree , 1984 ; Rubin , 1976 ) present ...
Page 123
... argue , you're going to say things that you didn't mean . You can't help that , just liv- ing with someone , constantly , day in and day out , you're going to have arguments . I don't think that anyone can say that they haven't had ar ...
... argue , you're going to say things that you didn't mean . You can't help that , just liv- ing with someone , constantly , day in and day out , you're going to have arguments . I don't think that anyone can say that they haven't had ar ...
Contents
Series Editors Foreword | 9 |
WorkingClass Single Women in Historical | 22 |
The Research Process | 38 |
Copyright | |
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20th century Acker adulthood aunt birth cohort brother caregiving Chambers-Schiller child childhood cohort effects context course perspective daugh daughter dependent divorced empty nest Events Guide experiences familistic ideology family development family life course family life cycle family of orientation family of procreation father died felt feminist friends gender Gerontologist getting married girls Glick graduated from high groups Hareven high school household Hufton husband immigrants independence interdependence kids labor lifelong single women Linda Thompson marital careers marital status married women mother died never never-married women normative old age old maid older orphanage pathways patterns perceptions Rapp regrets relationship remained single responsibilities Rubin sample siblings sister social spinster stayed strategies surrogate mothers Syracuse University Tentler things tion took transition unmarried wanted Watkins widows woman women described women lived working-class families working-class women