Virtual Library
Berkeley Collection of Working and Occasional Papers
| <Previous Article | Next Article> |
TITLE:
Conscious Decisions, Unconscious Paths: Pregnancy and the Importance of Work for Women in Management
AUTHOR(S):
Lindy Fursman
DOCUMENT TYPE: Article
Lindy Fursman is a Pre-Doctoral Fellow at the Center for Working Families and a Ph.D. candidate in the Sociology Department at the University of California, Berkeley.
Working Paper No. 23
- Download the Document (PDF format - 81 K) - April 2001
- Tell a colleague about it.
ABSTRACT:
Many authors contend that women who are employed in senior corporate and management positions have often had to work “like men” in order to succeed; that is, they have had to put career before family and other commitments. Pregnancy, however, confounds the image of the corporate manager as someone for whom family is sidelined, and complicates the notion of the unencumbered worker traditionally required by capitalism. This paper reports the initial results of a study that explores the experiences of pregnant women employed in senior and corporate positions. Interviews with a small group of managers indicate that for many women in these positions, work becomes less important during pregnancy, and that this is not always a conscious decision. For some women, this change in work/family priorities seemed to occur more unconsciously, while for others, putting family first required more conscious “identity labor.”
