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Gendered moral rationalities in combining motherhood and employment : a case study of Sri LankaKodagoda, Delapolage Thilakshi Deepika January 2011 (has links)
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and economic environment has led to a rapid expansion in the number of women entering the paid labour force in Sri Lanka as elsewhere. However, their identities and workload continue to be defined around caring work, especially for children. Not surprisingly, employed mothers endeavour to balance these two central spheres of their life, family and work. This research focuses on the contradictions of mothers' work-life balance. It does so through an analysis of how successfully (or unsuccessfully) professional and managerial mothers in Sri Lanka combine motherhood with paid work, and how they understand this in terms of gendered identities and social norms. This example also allows an evaluation of western derived theories about mothers' decision making in the context of a developing, Asian country. Grounded theory was used to examine mothers' narratives about life in the family and at work, drawn from in-depth qualitative interviews, along with data from some representative secondary sources, in order to explore these questions. This thesis demonstrates that working women's mothering leads to the formation of a gendered identity which varies according to different socio-cultural and religious opportunities and constraints. Using the Bourdieu approach the research suggests how everyday life operates in terms of habitus, field and capital. However, these working mothers have low capacity to achieve a work-life balance and this may lead to complex social problems.
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Gendered moral rationalities in combining motherhood and employment. A case study of Sri LankaKodagoda, Delapolage T.D. January 2011 (has links)
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social,
religious, political and economic environment has led to a rapid expansion in
the number of women entering the paid labour force in Sri Lanka as
elsewhere. However, their identities and workload continue to be defined
around caring work, especially for children. Not surprisingly, employed
mothers endeavour to balance these two central spheres of their life, family
and work. This research focuses on the contradictions of mothers¿ work-life
balance. It does so through an analysis of how successfully (or
unsuccessfully) professional and managerial mothers in Sri Lanka combine
motherhood with paid work, and how they understand this in terms of
gendered identities and social norms. This example also allows an evaluation
of western derived theories about mothers¿ decision making in the context of
a developing, Asian country. Grounded theory was used to examine mothers¿
narratives about life in the family and at work, drawn from in-depth qualitative
interviews, along with data from some representative secondary sources, in
order to explore these questions. This thesis demonstrates that working
women¿s mothering leads to the formation of a gendered identity which varies
according to different socio-cultural and religious opportunities and
constraints. Using the Bourdieu approach the research suggests how
everyday life operates in terms of habitus, field and capital. However, these
working mothers have low capacity to achieve a work-life balance and this
may lead to complex social problems.
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