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Crunch Time
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09 June 2020

In Crunch Time, Aliya Hamid Rao gets up close and personal with college-educated, unemployed men, women, and spouses to explain how comparable men and women have starkly different experiences of unemployment. Traditionally gendered understandings of work—that it’s a requirement for men and optional for women—loom large in this process, even for marriages that had been not organized in gender-traditional ways. These beliefs serve to make men’s unemployment an urgent problem, while women’s unemployment—cocooned within a narrative of staying at home—is almost a non-issue. Crunch Time reveals the minutiae of how gendered norms and behaviors are actively maintained by spouses at a time when they could be dismantled, and how gender is central to the ways couples react to and make sense of unemployment.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Tale of Two Unemployments
part i gender and space during unemployment
1. Men at Home
2. Idealizing the Home and Spurning the Workplace?
part ii gendered time in job searching
3. Dinner Table Diaries
4. Can Women Be Ideal Job-Seekers?
part iii gendered time in housework
5. Why Don’t Unemployed Men Do More Housework?
6. Why Do Unemployed Women Do Even More Housework?
Conclusion: Unemployment and Inequality in an Age of Uncertainty
Appendix A: Methodology
Appendix B: Interview Guide for Unemployed Professionals and Spouses
Notes
References
Index