The Myth of Being “Like a Daughter” By: Grace Esther Young Presented by: Sylvia Lozada.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gender and Development in the Middle East & North Africa: Women in the Public Sphere Nadereh Chamlou Senior Advisor, MENA Cairo. June 10, 2004.
Advertisements

Chapter 11: The American Family
Tudor Stuart Society Family & Women. What was the nature of English society and economy?  Patriarchy  A rural economy and society  No organised tax.
Standards/Elements SSEF4 The student will compare and contrast different economic systems and explain how they answer the three basic economic questions.
Chapter 22 Section 2 The Factory System. How Machines Affected Work  It was no longer necessary for a person to go through years of study to become an.
By: Neha Choudhary. When women are assigned with the labels of being/becoming a widow there is an impact that is felt though many different forms within.
Demographic Trends in European History
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide Workers, Wages, and Unemployment in the Modern Economy.
 The structure of the Chinese family resembled that of families in agricultural civilizations in accentuating the importance of unity and the power of.
LESSON OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
Montréal, October 17th to 20th Outline Background of Vietnam’s economy. Vietnam’s Labour Market. Key Issues with Vocational Training and Employment.
 Identified a pattern of segregated roles in Bethnal Green.  Men went to work and spent leisure time at the pub  Women stayed at home and.
The Myth of Being “Like a Daughter” By, Grace Esther Young Presented by, Savannah Schulze.
European Contact Group in the Czech Republic Gender and migration Eva Kavková
Helen Safa Economic Restructuring and Gender Subordination.
The Economy and Marketing
Pre Industrial Families
SOSC 200Y Gender and Society Lecture 17: Conflicting roles - working mother.
The third International Population Geography Conference Liverpool, June 2006 Proximity of adult children to their elderly parents in the Netherlands.
The Labor Market and Potential GDP The Supply of Labor –The quantity of labor supplied is the number of labor hours that all the households in the economy.
Dual Income Why and How to Make it Work Balancing Work and Family.
Role of women in 1930.
The Role of Women in Victorian Society. Women and the Home Women were thought to have their priority as the home, with a domestic role. This meant they’re.
History of the Family Familial mode of production Hunting/gathering
Chapter 1: “Professed” nursing: from duty to trade Lauren Heeke Cohort 7.
The Movement for Women’s Rights
Chapter 10: Worker Mobility. Worker mobility movement from one job to another. this may involve geographical changes, and/or movement from one employer.
STATE OF ART IN GREEK FAMILY
WOMEN IN 1940’s SOCIAL EXPECTATIONS OF WOMEN by Sophia Yang Cassey Namkung Diana Kim Young-Joo Lim Olivia Shin.
McGraw-Hill © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 9-1 Chapter Nine l Work and Families.
If so, why? Jakob Glidden Is the progress towards gender equality stalled?
Distinguish East from West Family & Children Family is the basic foundation of Taiwan Society!!!
CH 13 “Do Something you Love and You Will Never Work a Day in Your Life”
Social Class and Poverty. Intro Every society has some way to structure how people get financial rewards and other benefits (wealth) Access to wealth.
Child labour in Vietnam
The “New Woman” The “New Woman” Changing Attitudes towards Women pre
L5: Revolutionary Changes in Social Life: Changes in the Meaning of Work Cont & The Changing Definition of the Family Agenda Objective: To understand…
March 16 th Attendance and participation Let me know if you want to do and re-write for exam #1 Lecture 8: Gender Stratification Homework:  CCA annotated.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON1 CIVICS IN PRACTICE HOLT Chapter 1 We the People Section 1: Civics in Our Lives Civics in Our LivesCivics in Our Lives Section.
Family Structures.
Factory System Sect 2-3. The Factory System Machines made work easier, and it was easier to learn how to run a machine as compared to being an apprentice.
Women and Work Outline and assess the view that women’s role in the economy has changed since 1945.
Women in Victorian Britain.
Roots. Demography Demography is the study of population characteristics Changing population trends in the UK is an important topic for Geographers to.
The Changing Family Kristen Ruiz Briana Simoes Astrid Ramirez Alix.
Marriage in the Ancient Regime Family life went through a significant change in the 18 th century.
SOME IMPORTANT INFORMATION Industrial Revolution.
The American Family 50 years of change. Change… The American family has undergone tremendous change in the last 50 years. Some argue that family life.
Queen Victoria ( ) 1837 Victoria became queen at the age of 18. Her reign lasted 64 years. She was an example to the people of her country, in.
In general, family life stabilized after 1850 as the home became more important for people of all social classes and attitudes toward women and children.
Roots. Demography Demography is the study of population characteristics Changing population trends in the UK is an important topic for geographers to.
STANDARD(S): 11.1 Students analyze the significant events in the founding of the nation. LESSON OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT 1.Describe the growing presence.
DECENT WORK – A COMMON GOAL FOR THE YOUTH AND TRADE UNIONS IN AFRICA Presented by Georgia MENSAH, Acting Youth Coordinator ITUC-Africa.
Canadian Families.  Polygyny – the practice of a man having more than one wife  Polyandry – when several men are required to support a wife and children.
Chapter 12 Section 2: Changes in Working Life. Mills Change Workers Lives Many mill owners could not find enough people to work in the factories because.
Alexa Kleinberg WORK, FAMILY, AND BLACK WOMEN’S OPPRESSION BY PATRICIA COLLINS.
WWII employment for women
Women’s role in the economy has changed since 1945.
Why and How to Make it Work Balancing Work and Family
The Factory System Chapter 19 Section 2.
George Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics
Chapter 13-Section 2- The Twenties Woman
Women’s role in the economy has changed since 1945.
Why and How to Make it Work Balancing Work and Family
The Great Depression and WWII
Women’s role in the economy has changed since 1945.
“Women not girls rule my world” --Prince
Basics of Our Economic System
Section 2-The Twenties Woman
Women’s Rights.
Presentation transcript:

The Myth of Being “Like a Daughter” By: Grace Esther Young Presented by: Sylvia Lozada

Lima, Peru – 1940’s -1970’s There is a strong increase in the middle class that developed from a stage of economic growth and stability between the end of WWII and the mid 1970’s There is a strong increase in the middle class that developed from a stage of economic growth and stability between the end of WWII and the mid 1970’s Service Sector increased which created a high number of available jobs in this sector –Government work, nursing, secretarial and teaching positions During this time there was a large number of women entering these white collar jobs

Effects on Lower Income Women While the development in Peru lead to an increase in employment for white collar women it also lead to a decrease in manual labor which is an area usually filled by low income women. –Any slight job growth in this sector went to men –Domestic service became one of the few employment options for lower income women

Domestic Service A high demand for domestic servants came from a higher number of middle and upper class women entering the service sector. Rural lower income Indian women of Incan decent began to migrate at young ages to Lima in search of work

Public and Private? From a very young age, girls are directed to fill the role of wife and mother –Charactorized by love, devotion and respect –Catholic Church reinforces the idea of duty and devotion to the family The need to find suitable income makes lower income women go into public sphere to earn money for the family Domestic service combines working in the public sphere with the private sphere because even though they are earning money for their families, they are doing work that is characterized by the private sphere

The Myth of Being “Like a Daughter” The girls start working at a young age so they likely develop and attachment to their host family and may even be shown affection by the patron family to where she appears to be “like a daughter” By defining her “like a daughter” it is an effort to secure dependence and devotion to the family that is cemented by the private sphere values of love, devotion and respect In reality, though they may see her as “like a daughter” she will never be able to have the same kinds of opportunities that the actually children in the family have such as a high level of education –The work of a domestic servant actually helps the children of the family to have more freedom.

This also helps the woman of the house by removing her from the laborious chores that she would normally be doing around the house. The domestic servant then becomes a kind of status symbol because while she could she help around the house she no longer has to.

Emotional effect of being “like a daughter” “The food they gave me was a few beans with some very hard tortillas. There was a dog in the house, a pretty, white, fat dog. When I saw the maid bring out the dogs food – bits of meat, rice, things that the family ate – and they gave me a few beans and hard tortillas, that hurt me very much. The dog had a good meal and I didn’t deserve as good a meal as the dog. Anyway, I ate it … But I felt rejected. I was lower than the animals in the house.” Quote from I, Rigioberta Menchu: An Indian Woman in Guatemala

Marginalized Women Domestic Service is not protected by outside institutions. –“Laws governing the sector of domestic servants support her isolation by legitimizing the separation of the family from the public sphere.” –Domestic service is defined apart from labor for profit “by stating that the relationship with those who benefit from her labor is one of trust, the government legitimates the paternalistic ideology of domestic service.”

These ideas are reinforced by structural aspects of domestic service –Amount of time spent working –Upper Class values “As long as she remains ignorant of her position as a servant she will not question her marginalized position” However in the early 1970’s domestic servants began to talk to each other about their dependent and insecure positions. “Through sharing information, a slow process of consciousness- raising began as they discovered that, while each girl’s situation had its specific characteristics, they were all subject to very similar conditions in their patron families. They began to identify with one another; as workers in homes, and as rural, Indian people.”

During this time there was a decline in manual jobs in the formal sector due to the collapse of the textile industry This leads to an increase in economic participation by lower class women entering the informal labor market especially vending For the first time since the 1940’s, women’s participation in the formal labor market decreased leaving many middle class women without jobs – Economic crisis created a long and severe recession

Vending Recession effected the earning power of women in the middle class so many were no longer able to hire them –1970 – 51% of households had a domestic servant –1981 – 25% Not as attractive –Have to have own accommodation –Certain amount of capital Domestic service was then handed to extended members of the family instead of outside help

“ Few opportunities are available to them apart from the vendor sector. The absorption of these women into the vendor sector, then, is a result of their expulsion from the domestic service sector.” During this time however there are a number of women leaving domestic service for vending due to the increased freedom they would have. –Still marginalized members of society

Conclusion Dependence on patron family is driven by the paternalistic ideals that within the culture that are emphasized by the church. As a wage earner this leaves her vulnerable not only because she has the least amount of power in the house but also because she lacks protection from the government. Economic insecurity narrows the need for domestic servants. The few job opportunities that are available to them are just as economically unstable and equally marginalizing.