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Scholarship March 29, 2017

The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work

The Wabash Center

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Author
Hochschild, Arlie Russell
Publisher
Henry Holt and Co., New York, NY
ISBN
080504471X
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
ch. 1 The Waving Window
ch. 2 Managed Values and Long Days
ch. 3 An Angel of an Idea
ch. 4 Family Values and Reversed Worlds
ch. 5 Giving at the Office
ch. 6 The Administrative Mother
ch. 7 "All My Friends Are Worker Bees": Being a Part-Time Professional
ch. 8 "I'm Still Married": Work as an Escape Valve
ch. 9 "Catching Up on the Soaps": Male Pioneers in the Culture of Time
ch. 10 What If the Boss Says No?
ch. 11 "I Want Them to Grow Up to Be Good Single Moms"
ch. 12 The Overextended Family
ch. 13 Overtime Hounds
ch. 14 The Third Shift
ch. 15 Evading the Time Bind
ch. 16 Making Time
Appendix
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
In her remarkable new book, The Time Bind, Arlie Hochschild brings us startling news of the ways in which home is being invaded by the time pressures and efficiencies of work, while the workplace is, for many parents, being transformed into a strange kind of surrogate home. For three years at a Fortune 500 company, she interviewed everyone from top executives to factory hands, sat in on business meetings, followed sales teams onto golf courses, and trailed working parents and their children through their days. In a series of vivid portraits, Hochschild paints a surprising picture of couples as time thieves, children as emotional bill-collectors, spouses as efficiency experts, parents who feel like helpful mothers and fathers mainly to their workmates, and women who - like generations of men before them - flee the pressures of home for the relief of work. Hochschild's groundbreaking study exposes our crunch-time world and reveals how, after the first shift at work and the second at home, comes the third, and hardest, shift of repairing the damage created by the first two. (From the Publisher)