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- W2076685013 abstract "Daily logs collected over a 10-week period from a small, nonrepresentative sample of young, childless married couples were examined. Housework was conceptualized as a daily decision predicated upon personal standards, social rhythms, and stress variables that shape the perception of need for housework. Findings indicate that home-based stress, stress from outside the home, and standards are independent, additive predictors of housework time. In addition, stress and standards interact in ways suggesting that stress modifies the meaning of performance. High home-based stress and low imported stress lead to more critical evaluations of ones' own performance and more monitoring of one's spouse's contributions. Husbands do more when wives do more, but only when wives import little stress from outside the home or perceive high demand for housework. Results are interpreted in terms of patterns of meaning and obligation. Key Words: daily logs, family work, home-based stress, performance standards, work stress. [Reference] REFERENCES [Reference] Antill, J. K., & Cottin, S. (1988). Factors affecting the division of labor in households. Sex Roles, 18, 531553. Berk, S. E (1985). The gender factory. Plenum: New York. Biernat, M., & Wortman, C. B. (1991). Sharing of home responsibilities between professionally employed women and their husbands. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 60, 844-860. Bolger, N., Delongis, A., Kessler, R. C., & Wethington, E. (1989). The contagion of stress across multiple roles. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 51, 175183. [Reference] Coltrane, S. (1990). Birth timing and the division of labor in dual-earner families: Exploratory findings and suggestions for future research. Journal of Family Issues, 11, 157-181. Coltrane, S. (1996). Family man: Fatherhood, housework and gender equity. New York: Oxford University Press. Coltrane, S., & Ishii-Kuntz, M. (1992). Men's housework: A life course perspective. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 54, 43-57. Coverman, S. (1985). Explaining husbands' participation in domestic labor. Sociological Quarterly, 26, 81-97. [Reference] Crouter, A. C., Perry-Jenkins, M., Huston, T L., & Crawford, D. W. (1989). The influence of work-induced psychological states on behavior at home. Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 10, 273-292. Ferree, M. M. (1991). The gender division of labor in two-earner marriages. Journal of Family Issues, 12, 158-180. Goldsmith, E. B. (1995). Resource management for individuals and families. St. Paul, MN: West. [Reference] Gross, I. H., Crandel, E. W., & Knoll, M. M. (1988). Management for modern families (4th ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. Hartmann, H. (1981). The family as the locus of gender, class and political struggle: The example of housework. Signs, 6, 366-394. Hawkins, A. J., Marshall, C. M., & Meiners, K. M. (1995). Exploring wives' sense of fairness about family work: An initial test of the distributive justice framework. Journal of Family Issues, 16, 693-721. Hochschild, A. (1989). The second shift: Working parents and the revolution at home. New York: Viking. Jaccard, J., Turrisi, R., & Wan, C. K. (1990). …" @default.
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- W2076685013 date "2001-11-01" @default.
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- W2076685013 title "Stress and Performance Standards: A Dynamic Approach to Time Spent in Housework" @default.
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