Abstract

Societal beliefs about womens work have long been a metric for gender equality, with recent scholarship focusing on trends in these attitudes to assess the progress (or stalling) of the gender revolution. Moving beyond widely critiqued gender attitude questions thought to be the only available items for measuring change over time, this article considers womens and mens views toward their own work over the last half century. Traditional gender scripts frame womens labor force participation as less than ideal, something to do if financially necessary but not because work is intrinsically rewarding. Historically, this gender frame was reinforced by religion. We examine the gender gap in working for its own sake over time and whether and how religious involvement moderates these trends. Overall, the gender gap has declined to the point where it is now virtually nonexistent. However, religious involvement acts as a countervailing influence, bolstering the gap such that frequently attending men and women have not yet converged in their desire to work. Although the most religious Americans have not yet converged, mens dropping desire to work and womens rising desire to work are society-wide trends, and even the most religious Americans could be expected to converge at some point in the future. Traditionalist institutions contribute to unevenness in the gender revolution, but preferences cannot explain the persistent society-wide precari ty of womens work: Women now prefer to work for works sake at the same rate men do.

Details

Title
The Religious Work Ethic and the Spirit of Patriarchy: Religiosity and the Gender Gap in Working for Its Own Sake, 1977 to 2018
Author
Schnabel, Landon 1 ; Schleifer, Cyrus 2 ; Abdelhadi, Eman 1 ; Perry, Samuel L 3 

 University of Oklahoma 
 University of Chicago 
 Cornell University 
Pages
75-101
Publication year
2022
Publication date
2022
Publisher
Society for Sociological Science
e-ISSN
23306696
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2890388478
Copyright
© 2022. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.