For
immediate release
June 9, 2003
DESPITE GETTING LESS, DADS ARE HAPPIER,
STUDY OF FATHER'S, MOTHER'S DAY REVEALS
SOUTH HADLEY, Mass. Families make less of a fuss over
Father's Day than they do over Mother's Day, yet dads are more
satisfied with their special day, according to a study that casts
a light on how stereotypical gender roles play out even in familes
where both parents work outside the home and advocate an equal
division of domestic labor.
Nicole Gilbert, who recently received her master's degree in
psychology and education at Mount Holyoke College, wrote her study,
"Flowers for Mom, a Tie for Dad: Doing Gender on Mother's
and Father's Day," after interviewing 53 couples to learn
how the two holidays are celebrated and what those celebrations
say about what society values in motherhood and fatherhood. Her
study is one of few to compare the holidays.
Gilbert found that families reported celebrating Father's Day
an average of 3.5 hours, or about two hours less than Mother's
Day. She also found that fathers are less likely to receive gifts
eight of the 53 fathers got no presents, compared with
just one of the 53 mothers and that those gifts tended
to revolve around his role as the provider (neckties and wallets,
for example) and individualistic hobbies (such as golf clubs and
fishing rods). And fathers are less likely to be taken out to
dinner. (It's the mom who is seen as needing relief from the chore
of cooking.)
Yet dads were more satisfied with their special day than were
moms. On a scale of 1-5, with 5 being the highest, dads rated
their days a 4.6, while moms gave their days a 4.27.
Why is Dad happier? Gilbert suggests three possible reasons:
- Many fathers say that simply having time with their families
is valuable and a change from the routine.
- Fathers have fewer expectations. Unlike Mother's Day, which
tends to be highly scripted around the woman's value as parent
and nurturer, Father's Day is more loosely structured.
- Research indicates that men are not defined by their role
as fathers, while women are defined by their role as mothers.
Therefore, recognizing their contributions as parents is not
as crucial to their self-identity as it is for women.
Gilbert's work is grounded in the idea that "gender is
not something you are, but something you do," and she notes
that Mother's Day and Father's Day are rare among holidays because
they are "occasions through which gender is created."
The two holidays are events in which society's "normative
conceptions of masculinity and femininity" play out in the
family home, even among families that might disagree with those
conceptions.
"It is true that Mother's and Father's Day interrupt our
routine; however, I will argue that, instead of ridding people
of 'everyday roles,' they are reminded of their positions as mothers
and fathers and as a result may even behave more stereotypically
on these two days than on nongendered occasions," Gilbert
says.
In practice, it means that the way household chores are done
is much more likely to change on Mother's Day than on Father's
Day, because the chores are considered the mom's responsibility.
Gifts given on the two holidays are much more likely to be stereotypically
masculine or feminine than the gifts given to those same mothers
and fathers on their birthdays it's not the man as an individual,
but the man in society's role of the father, who's honored on
Father's Day.
Gilbert, who plans to present her dad with a flowering plant
this Father's Day, has no desire to throw a wet blanket on the
holidays. "I am certainly not arguing for a movement to abolish
Mother's and Father's Day, but I am hoping that one day these
celebrations will not be as gendered. Perhaps in the future when
children think about gifts to give on these occasions they will
not be so eager to give Mom flowers and Dad a tie."
Gilbert was advised by professor of psychology and education
Francine M. Deutsch, the author of Halving It All: How Equally
Shared Parenting Works (Harvard University Press, 1999), the result
of her qualitative study focused on how couples transformed parental
roles to create truly equal families.
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