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BestsellerE-book
Author Streib, Jessi, author.

Title The power of the past : understanding cross-class marriages / Jessi Streib.

Publication Info. New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2015]

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xiv, 290 pages)
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Cover; The Power of the Past; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Part I Introduction; 1 Class and Marriage; Part II Entering into and Thinking about Different-Origin Marriages; 2 Understandings of Class; 3 Accounts of Crossing the Class Divide; Part III Class and the Domains of Married Life; 4 Money; 5 Work and Play; 6 Housework and Time; 7 Parenting; 8 Feeling Rules; 9 Conclusion; Appendix A: Data and Methods; Appendix B: Respondents' Demographic Characteristics and Meeting Places.
Appendix C: Interview Questionnaire; Notes; References; Index.
Summary In an era in which class divisions are becoming starker than ever, some individuals are choosing to marry across class. The Power of the Past traces the lives of a subset of these individuals - highly-educated adults who married a partner raised in a class different from their own, primarily between those from blue- and white-color backgrounds. Drawing upon detailed interviews with spouses who revealed the inner workings of their marriages, Jessi Streib shows that crossing class lines is not easy, and that even though these couples shared bank accounts, mortgages, children, and friends, each spouse was still shaped by the class of their past, and consequently, so was their marriage. Streib reveals what was rarely apparent to the husbands and wives she interviewed. The class of their past did not only matter in determining the amount of money they had as children or what job their parents went off to each morning; It also mattered in more subtle ways, by systematically shaping their ideas of how to go about their daily lives. Upwardly mobile spouses who grew up in blue-collar families learned to take a laissez-faire approach to the world around them: they preferred to go with the flow, make the most of the moment, and avoid self-imposed constraints. Their spouses, who grew up in professional white-collar families, however, wanted to manage the world around them: they organized, planned, monitored, and oversaw. Living with a spouse who was born into a different class means navigating these differences - differences that appeared across nearly every aspect of their lives, from how they manage their finances, to how they manage their time - both at home and on vacation - to ideas about how their children should be raised. The Power of the Past illustrates that when individuals are raised in different classes, merged lives do not lead to merged ideas about how to lead those lives. Individuals can come together across class lines, but their enduring class characteristics cannot be left behind.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Marriage.
Marriage.
Social classes.
Social classes.
Spouses.
Spouses.
Married people -- Social conditions.
Married people -- Social conditions.
Married people.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Subject Marriage.
Married people.
Other Form: Print version: Streib, Jessi. Power of the past 9780199364428 (DLC) 2014021623 (OCoLC)881469415
ISBN 9780199364442 (electronic book)
0199364443 (electronic book)
9780199364428
0199364427
9780199364435
0199364435