Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Changing Role Of Housework And Child Care In The Women's Lives In Meg Luxton's "More Than A Labour Of Love". Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
8 pages in length. Gender inequity has long been a social ill inextricably linked with female oppression, with the homefront the primary location where this predisposition is most apparent. According to Meg Luxton, author of "More Than A Labour of Love: Three Generations of Women's Work in the Home," the free labor women have been providing for centuries is the basis upon which society revolves and, thereby, perpetuates itself. If women did not stay home and tend to the children and housework, the men would not be able to seek work outside the home; as such, women's contribution to a successful society is both critical and wholly ignored. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCHouseW.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
location where this predisposition is most apparent. According to Meg Luxton, author of More Than A Labour of Love: Three Generations of Womens Work in the Home, the free
labor women have been providing for centuries is the basis upon which society revolves and, thereby, perpetuates itself. If women did not stay home and tend to the children
and housework, the men would not be able to seek work outside the home; as such, womens contribution to a successful society is both critical and wholly ignored. Luxton explores
three different generations as a means by which to chronicle the changes that have occurred where housewives are concerned, clearly illustrating just how inextricably interwoven the distinct separation of gender
responsibilities is to patriarchy. One can look as far back as Biblical times to find evidence of gender oppression amidst patriarchal society, with a womans role being one of
subservience whose toiled efforts were considered worthless. Author Susanne Laughton notes how women had a practical, more egalitarian relationship with men in society for 40,000 years, which was directly
related to the need for a shared responsibility for survival (Laughton 17). This began to change when men became associated with the male figure of God, at which point
ideals began to shift toward male superiority. Once the ideal developed, the belief that men were superior gained strength-always supported by evolving religious doctrines. Luxton points a critical finger
to the pursuit of capitalism as one of the most damning aspects to keep womens home-based contributions lacking the long overdue recognition it truly deserves. When one considers how
Marxists have tended to focus on the "production of the means of existence and have left out of their analysis the production of human beings themselves" (Luxton PG), it
...