I’m supershort on battery so may only get through part of this next session, but here we go…
Jeremy Adam Smith, creator of the blog Daddy Dialectic and author of the book The Daddy Shift, is introducing the panel by talking about the difference in attitudes about fatherhood among his grandfather, his father, and himself.
Panelists are:
Reeve Vanneman (he’ll be talking about The End of Gender Revolution?)
Oriel Sullivan (on Slow but Steady-ish Change)
Josh Coleman (speaking on The Ghost of Traditional Marraige in Contemporary Ones)
Mignon Moore (talking about Is Convergence Moot in Same Sex Copules?)
Amy and Marc Vachon, bloggers at Equally Shared Parenting and coauthors of a forthcoming book on the subject (on that)
Reeve Vanneman is up first: There was a big shift in the 1990s, he notes, a stalling in gender revolution. But the question is, why? Three possible reasons:
1. End of feminist protest: in the mid-1990s, media coverage of feminism declined…
2. Economics: in the mid-1990s, for the first time in a long time, men’s earnings increased. They had stagnated in the 1970s, but during the early Clinton years, there were fairly broad-based increases in men’s earnings.
3. Culture: gender attitudes shifted (ie, when surveys asked questions like “do you agree that a working mother can have a warm relationship with her children?” the answer “yes” trended upward from the 1970s, then leveled off in the 1990s; other questions tracked were questions like “do you believe that men make better politicians”? etc)
In sum, we have evidence that there was a stalling of gender revolution in the mid-1990s. But we don’t fully know WHY.
ARGH! Hate to leave ya’ll hanging, but I’m running out of battery here…
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