Why Women Love The Home But Not Being A Homemaker
…my job?” is not a box that many homemakers would check. While there are exceptions and wonderful communities to be found in support of homemakers, one doesn’t have to look…
Displaying 52 results for: homemaker
…my job?” is not a box that many homemakers would check. While there are exceptions and wonderful communities to be found in support of homemakers, one doesn’t have to look…
…influence policy. The word “homemaker” often brings to mind sewing curtains and baking bread out on the prairie. Yet this narrow view of homemaking leaves out the innumerable other things…
The holidays are a perfect time for festive gatherings: neighborly carol-sings, hayrides followed by warm hot cocoa, candlelit cocktail parties, and cozy potlucks. It’s the season marked by hospitality, that…
…pay. The children’s education outcomes were highest with the traditional male breadwinner, female homemaker arrangement. Families in which the father worked full time and the mother worked part-time saw comparably…
…he sees it) implicitly denigrate homemakers’ life choices. I like homemakers. I don’t think it’s especially important to cultivate “fierceness” in girls. Even so, I think French and others should…
…closing in on Germany and Japan! Alas, there has been no net job creation in India over the last decade because Indian women prefer to be homemakers. What the article…
…to do. Also, the $3.5 trillion in incalculable value full-time mothers provide does not somehow become worthless or unimportant just because it is outside the formal economy. Indeed, supporting breadwinner-homemaker families…
…in Her Homemaker Era… Homemaker, homesteader, whatever you want to call it — if your mom is all about growing her own food and/or making it from scratch, then she’s…
…post-war suburban household, women provided a counterbalance against worldly achievement. That’s part of what homemaking was. Leading women of the second wave, however, led homemakers to dump all things third…
…In both longitudinal and cross-sectional studies for recent cohorts of women, about 5-10 percent of women expect to be full-time homemakers. But more than twice as many, 15-20 percent, actually…
…Phyllis’ band of STOP ERA homemakers, who storm their state capitol with freshly-baked bread: “brainwashed” and “last gasp of the patriarchy.” But the series producers, who purposely boxed out Schlafly’s…
…employees with young children at home were able to take the proper time off to invest in their families. Flanked by her humble cadre of homemakers, Schlafly handed the feminist…
…it often requires more time than work outside the home requires. According to economists Michael Cox and Richard Alm, the average workweek of a homemaker in the 1950s was 52…
…partying in the hottest clubs in the world, only to finally decide what she really wants is the life of a domestic homemaker, and a hot domestic homemaker at that….
…class could also aspire to assume “one of the most important titles of all, homemaker,” instead of climbing the corporate ladder. Not content to stop there, he turned the heresy…
…and women increasingly see marriage as a bad deal. Feminists have long pointed out that when women live as homemakers they are vulnerable to male abandonment. Meanwhile, the unilateral divorce…
…the word homemaker is triggering, and we can’t define womanhood. Yet, culturally, we hang onto feminism, much like the addicted smoker’s yellowing fingers, who can’t give it up, even to…
…homemakers who had never done public speaking or worked outside the home, to debate ERA supporters on college campuses and local television stations, and to lobby their state houses. Schlafly…
…alone during Covid regulations. He warned of the tyranny of diversity, equity, and inclusion over free speech. Perhaps most inflammatory of all, he used the word “homemaker” and encouraged young…
…Advisor Michael Flynn just two weeks ago. Flynn was caught in a perjury trap orchestrated by the same man hellbent two decades earlier on landing the nation’s beloved celebrity homemaker…
…sustain and defend the country for generations. As C.S. Lewis said so well, “The homemaker has the ultimate career. All other careers exist for one purpose only – and that…
…A lesser but important supporting character is housewife Mary Bailey, who at first glance appears to be simply the tranquil homemaker who takes care of the house and helps raise…
…moms, even working moms, want to be stay-at-home moms, and large shares even of women who aren’t moms desire to be full-time homemakers. Arguing that these women are making some…
…culture writer for various publications. Her blog, Homemaker Hopeful, explores the skills of taking care of home and family. Jonathan S. Tobin In an era where the collapse of corporate media credibility…
…personal brands rather than domains for family-building. When we copy the people making money off selling advertising to women, it’s no wonder we don’t become more successful homemakers — that’s…
Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker is being dragged for stating during a 2023 commencement address that one of the most important titles a woman can have is “homemaker.” But…
…heaped heartfelt praise on his wife, Isabelle, and told female graduates that whatever career success they might achieve, their most important title will be “homemaker.” “Some of you may go…
…they are also reportedly recruiters, trainers of female suicide bombers, wives and homemakers, fund-raisers and propagandists. They also help sanitize the group’s image by posting photos of themselves drinking milkshakes…
…other dedicated drug users. Yes, there are cases of doctors and lawyers and homemakers smoking pot regularly and functioning effortlessly in the world. Yes, like all things, alcohol has downside…
…American example such as Abigail Adams who, while technically a “homemaker,” ran an entire farm not a carpool. Cooperation, mutual admiration and the resulting benefits are the hallmarks of the…
…from the men’s standpoint, we should recognize that the homemakers of today (or, if you prefer, “primary caregivers”) look very different from 1950s housewives. The sky is really the limit…
…they were oppressed by being homemakers and were promised liberation by feminists only to find out that they now have to work all the time, frequently with no spouse, and…
…traditional publications. Lastly, I want to thank our readers, from the influential columnists to the homemakers, who have been so dedicated and generous and thoughtful in their engagement of our…
…is the homemaker, usually white and suburban, in her thirties and forties. She stays at home or works—usually part-time. “Spirituality, and often religion, are important to her, and she views…
…being made to feel bad for wanting to be homemakers, spend more time with our children or simply have more flexible schedules than we would otherwise be able to in…
…women who are homemakers. I am a stay-at-home mother, albeit one who has also worked full time for a few years, and trust me on this: the least stagnant I’ve…