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Invisible Household Labor and Ramifications for Adjustment: Mothers as Captains of Households
Author(s) -
Lucia Ciciolla,
Suniya S. Luthar
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
sex roles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.509
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1573-2762
pISSN - 0360-0025
DOI - 10.1007/s11199-018-1001-x
Subject(s) - feeling , psychology , division of labour , emptiness , social psychology , quality (philosophy) , middle class , dimension (graph theory) , developmental psychology , economics , philosophy , theology , epistemology , market economy , mathematics , pure mathematics
We address the issue of invisible labor in the home by examining how the distribution of the mental and emotional labor inherent to managing the household between spouses may be linked with women's well-being, including their satisfaction with life, partner satisfaction, feelings of emptiness, and experiencing role overload. In a sample of 393 U.S. married/partnered mothers, mostly of upper-middle class backgrounds with dependent children at home, results showed that a majority of women reported that they alone assumed responsibility for household routines involving organizing schedules for the family and maintaining order in the home. Some aspects of responsibilities related to child adjustment were primarily handled by mothers, including being vigilant of children's emotions, whereas other aspects were shared with partners, including instilling values in the children. Responsibility was largely shared for household finances. Regression analyses showed that after controlling for dimensions of emotional and physical intimacy, feeling disproportionately responsible for household management, especially child adjustment, was associated with strains on mothers' personal well-being as well as lower satisfaction with the relationship. The implications of our work highlight the need to consider the burden of household management on mothers' well-being and speak to mothers' own needs for support and care as the primary manager of the household. In future research on division of labor, it will be useful to measure these critical but often neglected dimensions of who coordinates the household, given potential ramifications of this dimension for the quality of marriages and women's personal well-being.

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