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Housework as ‘family practices’ in transnational couples: an exploratory study of middle-class Indians in the UK

Author

Summary

Some recent scholarship has proposed analysing housework within 'time' and 'space' to better understand the persistent gender gap in the division of household labour. This article presents the findings of an exploratory study of housework over the lifecourse of marriage and migration in 17 transnational, middle-class, dual-career Indian couples, married for 10 to 30 years and living in the UK for nine to 24 years. By applying Morgan's (2011) family practices approach (which includes themes of time and space and subthemes of the practical, symbolic and imaginary), the analysis revealed how the temporally and spatially changing (gendered) domestic practices of the sample were underpinned by decisions made by active agents and informed by, rather than just being a passive enactment of, normatively decreed roles, situated within a framework of 'cooperative conflict', as described by Amartya Sen. These findings have implications for how housework is both researched and theorised.

Volume and page numbers

Volume: 4 , p.131 -147

Subjects

Notes

Not held in Hilary Doughty Research Library - bibliographic reference only

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