首页
登录
职称英语
The Choice Myth Last week, The Washington Post ran a fr
The Choice Myth Last week, The Washington Post ran a fr
游客
2024-02-22
44
管理
问题
The Choice Myth
Last week, The Washington Post ran a front-page story that said most stay-at-home moms aren’t SUV-driving, daily yoga-doing, latte-drinking white, upper-middle-class women who choose to leave their high-powered careers to answer the call to motherhood. Instead, they are disproportionately low-income, non-college educated, young and foreign-born; in other words, they are women whose horizons are greatly limited and for whom the cost of child care, very often, makes work not a workable choice at all.
These findings, drawn from a new report by the Census Bureau, really ought to lead us to reframe our public conversations about who mothers are and why they do what they do. It should lead us away from all the moralistic bombast(大话) about mothers’ "choices" and "priorities". It should get us thinking less about choice, in fact, and make us focus more on the objective conditions that drive women’s lives. And they should drive us to think about the choices that we as a society must make to guarantee that the best possible opportunities are available for all families.
The basic finding of this latest report—that the more choices mothers have, the more likely they are to work—has been known, to anyone who’s taken the time to seriously look into the issue, for quite some time now. Ever since 2003, when Lisa Belkin’s article in The Times Magazine about highly privileged and ultra-high-achieving moms—"The Opt-Out Revolution" —was generalized by the news media to claim that mothers overall were choosing to leave the work force in droves, researchers have been revisiting the state of mothers employment and reaching very similar conclusions.
In 2005, the Motherhood Project at the Institute for American Values surveyed more than 2,000 women and published a report that said most mothers, given free choice in an ideal world, would choose to be employed—provided their employment didn’t impinge (侵占) excessively on their time with their kids. Approximately two-thirds said they’d ideally work part time or from home; only 16 percent said they’d prefer to work full-time. (Interestingly, the researchers said, it was the least-educated mothers who expressed the strongest preference for full-time work.)
In 2007, the sociologists David Cotter, Paula England and Joan Hermsen looked carefully at four decades of employment data and found that women with choices—those with college educations—were overwhelmingly choosing to stay in the work force. The only women "opting out" in any significant numbers were the very richest—those with husbands earning more than $125,000 a year—and the very poorest—those with husbands earning less than $23,400 a year.
You might say that the movement of the richest women out of the workforce proves that women will, in the best of all possible worlds, go home. But these women often have husbands who, in order to earn those top salaries, work 70 or 80 hours a week and travel extensively; someone has to he home. Many left high-powered careers that made similar demands on their time. They are privileged, it’s true, but very often they have also been cornered by the all-or-nothing non-choices of our workplaces.
The alternative narrative—of constricted horizons, not choice—that might have emerged from recent research has never really made it into the mainstream. It just can’t, it seems, find a foothold.
"The reason we keep getting this narrative is that there is this deep cultural conflict about mothers’ employment," England told me this week. "On the one hand, people believe women should have equal opportunities, but on the other hand, we don’t envision(展望) men taking on more child care and housework and, unlike Europe, we don’t seem to be able to envision family-friendly work policies. "
Why this matters—and why opening this topic up for discussion is important—is very clear: because our public policy continues to rest upon a fictitious idea, eternally recycled in the media, of mothers’ free choices, and not upon the constraints that truly drive their behavior. "If journalism repeatedly frames the wrong problem, then the folks who make public policy may very well deliver the wrong solution," is how E. J. Graff, the associate director and senior researcher at Brandeis University’s Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism once put it in the Columbia Journalism Review. "If women are happily choosing to stay home with their babies, that’s a private decision. But... it’s a public policy issue if schools, jobs and other American institutions are structured in ways that make it frustratingly difficult, and sometimes impossible, for parents to manage both their jobs and family responsibilities."
It looked, not so long ago, as though things were going to change. Barack Obama made increasing women’s work/life choices and providing more supports for working families a cornerstone of his campaign. All those lofty ideals, though, seem to have been forgotten in the realities of this recession, where plans to expand universal pre-K, paid family leave and subsidies for child care have gone the way of" state budget revenues. Even workfare, The Times reported this week, is being discarded in California in favor of old-style no-work welfare, because it’s been deemed too costly to give poor mothers job skills while providing decent child care.
In Fresno County, one of the first places in California where welfare recipients are being told about the policy change, which is voluntary for now, the new regulations aren’t being viewed as good news.
"Especially when you have kids, you can’t just sit around and collect checks," one mother told The Times. For now, 90 percent of beneficiaries in Fresno County are choosing to keep working and receiving child care subsidies.
When mothers can choose, they choose self-empowerment (自助自强). Because they know that there is no true difference between their advancement and the advancement of their children. Why do we so enduringly deny them the dignity of choice? [br] Women have limited horizon because of ______.
选项
A、more housework to do
B、cultural conflict
C、the demanding child-rearing
D、their confined employment
答案
B
解析
根据题干关键词women,limited horizon定位到原文第七段,进而定位到第八段第一句:The reason we keep getting this narrative is that there is this deep cultural conflict about mothers’ employment…可知妇女的视野窄,是因为由来已久的文化冲突,B)项符合原文。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3472311.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]MeganDellaSelva,asophomoreatGeorgeWashingtonUniversit
[originaltext]MeganDellaSelva,asophomoreatGeorgeWashingtonUniversit
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
GeorgeWashingtonCarvershowedthatplantlifewasmorethanjustfoodfor
Areorganicallygrownfoodsthebestfoodchoices?Theadvantagesclaimedfo
Areorganicallygrownfoodsthebestfoodchoices?Theadvantagesclaimedfo
随机试题
Inspiring,chicandeffortlesslyelegant—that’swhatdesignersatLondonFa
WriteonANSWERSHEETTHREEanoteofabout50—60wordsbasedonthefollo
手动控制状态下,当火灾探测器发出火警信号时,火灾报警控制器即发出火灾声、光报警信
一个口袋中有7个红球3个白球,从袋中任取一球,看过颜色后是白球则放回袋中,直至取
关于再生障碍性贫血病因的叙述,下列哪项错误? A.与肝炎病毒感染有关B.氯霉
托收是指委托人向其账户所在银行提交凭以收取款项的金融票据,要求托收行通过其联行或
大数据具有一些特性,下列选项中,不属于大数据的特性的是()。A.价值密度低
在对建设工程实施全过程监理的情况下,监理单位总进度计划的编制依据有()。A.施工
以下属于《安装计算规范》中安全文明施工及其他措施项目列项的是( )。A.特殊地
女性患者,25岁,膀胱刺激症状2年6个月,尿常规检查显示,尿中有大量红细胞、白细
最新回复
(
0
)