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Julia T. Wood - Who cares?: women, care, and culture

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At a time when studies suggest the average American woman spends seventeen years caring for children and eighteen years caring for aging parents, Julia T. Wood examines how culture creates and sustains our definitions of caring, determines who cares along gender lines, and assigns the diminished value that caring has in our society.Wood argues that Americas expanding need for caring is currently being met at an unacceptably high cost to caregivers. It is time, she believes, to examine caregiving roles and the personal, political, and social issues that surround the question of who cares. Caring must be recognized and promoted as an activity that commands the respect and participation of all members of our societymen and women alike.Only by implementing changes in the basic fabric of American culture, affecting both the structure and the policies of our society and government, can we, Wood concludes, carve out a system of caring that will recognize caring as everyones responsibility.

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title Who Cares Women Care and Culture author Wood Julia T - photo 1

title:Who Cares? : Women, Care, and Culture
author:Wood, Julia T.
publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
isbn10 | asin:0809318164
print isbn13:9780809318162
ebook isbn13:9780585186719
language:English
subjectWomen--Psychology, Nurturing behavior, Caregivers--United States.
publication date:1994
lcc:HQ1206.W893 1994eb
ddc:305.4
subject:Women--Psychology, Nurturing behavior, Caregivers--United States.
Page iii
Who Cares?
Women, Care, and Culture
Julia T. Wood
Southern Illinois University Press
Carbondale and Edwardwille
Page iv
Copyright 1994 by the Board of Trustees,
Southern Illinois University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Edited and designed by Robyn Laur Clark
Production supervised by Natalia Nadraga
97 96 95 94 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wood, Julia T.
Who cares? women, care, and culture / Julia T. Wood.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
1. WomenPsychology. 2. Nurturing behavior.
3. CaregiversUnited States. I. Title.
HQ1206W893 1994
305.4dc20 93-16226
ISBN 0-8093-1816-4 CIP
ISBN 0-8093-1948-9 pbk.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.Picture 2
Page v
This book is dedicated to my mother,
Frances Becker Wood,
whose life was organized around caring for others,
including me.
In so many ways she made me and my life possible.
From her I learned much about caring
and just as much about the exorbitant costs
it imposes on caregivers.
FRANCES BECKER WOOD
23 February 192318 March 1991
Page vii
Contents
Preface
ix
Acknowledgments
xiii
1. A Personal Introduction
1
2. Who Cares in Contemporary Western Culture?
16
3. Women, Caring, and the Burden of Selflessness
33
4. Gilligan's Rhetorical Construction of "Woman"
62
5. The Genesis of Women's Tendency to Care
86
6. Taking a Discursive Turn: Constructing Care
113
7. At a Cultural Crossroad: The Future of Care in the United States
131
8. Conclusion
162
Notes
173
References
181
Name Index
191
Subject Index
193

Page ix
Preface
Who Cares? is about what is and what can be. It is a warning about the mounting care crisis confronting us as we stand on the brink of the twenty-first century. It is an effort to understand highly personal issues of caring that come up in our individual lives. It is an inquiry into the discursive means that create and sustain attitudes toward caring and women within our culture. It is an argument for positioning care more centrally in our cultural life and enacting the structural and symbolic changes required to realize that reconfiguration. Finally, it is an invitation to participate in reforming our society and ourselves so that we are more humanly responsive and responsible.
No single study of women, care, and culture can be comprehensive, and this book is no exception. Within these broad concerns, my inquiry focuses on discursive practices that structure culture and, thus, our understandings of women and care. The institutions and practices that comprise a culture are embodiedthat is, expressed and sustainedthrough concrete, discursive activities of individuals, families, groups, and organizations. Studying discourse in those contexts illuminates both the existing structure of our society and the sites where it might be contested. I hope that my inquiry, in conjunction with that of many others, will contribute to a heightened awareness of the growing needs for care we face and the impossibility of fulfilling them within the current organization of our society.
Who Cares? offers no solutions, no quick fixes, no easy answers to how we might meet the care crisis in our country. To do so would be at once presumptuous and naive. I do, however, try to point to paths that might be fruitful in our efforts to address the care crisis and to locations where advocacy might be most persuasive. This, of course, does not provide an immediately satisfying resolution to the dilemma I identify. And I rather think that is desirable.
In developing his own theory of drama, Brecht indicted the narrative structure of Aristotelian drama for providing a catharsis that is all too consoling to an audience. Brecht's objection was that such catharsis relieves us of our discomfort and distress
Page x
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