Does Marital Status Make a Difference?

In this article, a comparison is made between the time that cohabiting and married women and men spend doing housework, to determine whether there are differences between them and to isolate the sources of those differences. Differences in cohabiting and married women's and men's household labor time are interpreted in light of the way that marital status may affect how gender is accomplished. Using the National Survey of Families and Households, the authors found that marital status affects women's household labor time but not men's; married women spend significantly more time on housework than do cohabiting women. In addition, the gap between cohabiting and married women's housework time cannot be accounted for by sociodemographic differences between them. It was also found that cohabiting women are more like single, noncohabiting women than they are like married women. That is, the research demonstrates the uniqueness of married women. It is not simply the presence of a man that is associated with women's spending more time on housework; it is the presence of a husband.

[1]  C. Broman Gender, Work-Family Roles, and Psychological Well-Being of Blacks. , 1991 .

[2]  Andrea J. Miller,et al.  Sex Roles: The Division of Labor at Home and in the Workplace , 1982 .

[3]  Beth Anne Shelton,et al.  Women, men and time: gender differences in paid work, housework and leisure , 1993 .

[4]  Catherine E. Ross,et al.  The Division of Labor at Home , 1987 .

[5]  The Sexual Bond: Rethinking Families and Close Relationships , 1989 .

[6]  M. Kotkin Sex roles among married and unmarried couples , 1983 .

[7]  Graham Kalton,et al.  Introduction to Survey Sampling , 1983 .

[8]  S. Coverman EXPLAINING HUSBANDS' PARTICIPATION IN DOMESTIC LABOR , 1985 .

[9]  F. Denmark,et al.  The relationship among sex roles, living arrangements, and the division of household responsibilities , 1985 .

[10]  K. Feinstein Working women and families , 1979 .

[11]  Scott Coltrane Household Labor and the Routine Production of Gender , 1989 .

[12]  A. DeMaris Predicting premarital cohabitation: Employing individuals versus couples as the units of analysis , 1984 .

[13]  P. Blumstein,et al.  American Couples: Money, Work, Sex , 1983 .

[14]  G. Spanier,et al.  Married and Unmarried Cohabitation in the United States. , 1980 .

[15]  Sarah Fenstermaker Berk The Gender Factory: The Apportionment of Work in American Households , 1985 .

[16]  G. Spitze,et al.  Sex Stratification: Children, Housework, and Jobs , 1984 .

[17]  K. Yllo Nonmarital cohabitation , 1978 .

[18]  Leslie D. Strong Alternative Marital and Family Forms: Their Relative Attractiveness to College Students and Correlates of Willingness to Participate in Nontraditional Forms. , 1978 .

[19]  L. Weitzman The marriage contract , 1983 .

[20]  G. Farkas Education, Wage Rates, and the Division of Labor Between Husband and Wife. , 1976 .

[21]  S. Sudman,et al.  Time, Goods, and Well-Being , 1985 .

[22]  J. Freeman,et al.  Women: A Feminist Perspective. , 1976 .

[23]  P. C. Glick American household structure in transition. , 1984, Family planning perspectives.

[24]  Joseph H. Pleck,et al.  Working wives, working husbands , 1986 .

[25]  W. Gove,et al.  At Home and at Work: The Family′s Allocation of Labor , 1983 .

[26]  G. Spitze The Division of Task Responsibility in U.S. Households: Longitudinal Adjustments to Change , 1986 .

[27]  W. Breines,et al.  The Marriage Contract: Spouses, Lovers and the Law , 1982 .

[28]  Ulf Böckenholt,et al.  Common Problems/Proper Solutions. , 1989 .

[29]  P. Bentler,et al.  Cohabitation before marriage , 1980, Alternative lifestyles.

[30]  R. Stafford The Division of Labor Among Cohabiting and Married Couples. , 1977 .

[31]  P. C. Glick Fifty Years of Family Demography: A Record of Social Change. , 1988 .

[32]  Paula England,et al.  Theory on gender/feminism on theory , 1993 .

[33]  L. Bumpass,et al.  The design and content of the National Survey of Families and Households. , 1988 .