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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page book review that examines Ruth Cowan' More Work for Mother. In this text, Cowan offers validation for the quantity and quality of the contribution that is made by unsung housewives toward society. Examining the topic of housework from colonial times to the present, Cowan argues that housewives have never received the recognition that their contributions for society should reasonably entail. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khcowan.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the contribution that is made by unsung housewives toward society. Examining the topic of housework from colonial times to the present, Cowan points out that "Households are the locales in
which our society produces healthy people, and housewives are the workers who are responsible for almost all the stages in that production process."1 Yet, Cowan argues that housewives have never
received the recognition that this task for society should reasonably entail. The following examination of Cowans thesis demonstrates that this argument is well-founded and, in presenting this argument, Cowan offers
some long-overdue homage to the housewives who have provided the backbone of society. Of course, the student researching this topic may wish to alter or change the above-stated thesis in
writing his or her own paper, while still drawing on the following discussion of the book for substantiation. This paper is meant solely as a template upon which the student
bases his or her own composition. Cowan points out that while much of the work that was conducted by our forefathers has been industrialized, housewives have experienced only partial industrialization,
as well as a devaluation of their work in the present era, and remain persistently invisible to both historians and the public at large. Her text endeavors to account for
these attitudes, through an analysis of the shifting relationships between gendered activities, as well as technical and social changes. In a comprehensive and often entertaining manner, Cowan addresses such topics
as the nature of housework, the division of labor prior to the industrial age, early industrialization and the consolidation of separate spheres of work for men and women. Cowan
explains that in pre-industrial America, during the colonial period, men and women shared labor. Men were responsible for cutting down and stacking wood; growing crops and milling corn; breeding and
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