But the idea that progressive attitudes can save working-class marriages also has some real problems. First, it underestimates the effective social conservatism of the upper-class model of family life — the resilience of traditional gender roles in work and child rearing, the continued role of religion in stabilizing well-educated family life, and the conservative messages encoded even in the most progressive education.
The first article,
by Claire Cain Miller, discussed the striking decline in divorce rates
among well-educated Americans, whose families seem to have adapted
relatively successfully to the sexual revolution and the postindustrial
economy.
The second,
by Binyamin Appelbaum, looked at the decline of work itself among
less-educated men, and the forces driving this decline: low wages and
weak job growth, the availability of safety-net income, the burden of
criminal records, and the fraying of paternal and marital bonds.
Many optimistic liberals believe not only that such imitation is possible, but that what needs to be imitated most are the most socially progressive elements
of the new upper class’s way of life: delayed marriage preceded by
romantic experimentation, more-interchangeable roles for men and women
in breadwinning and child rearing, a more emotionally open and egalitarian approach to marriage and parenting.
The
core idea here is that working-class men, in particular, need to let go
of a particular image of masculinity — the silent, disciplined
provider, the churchgoing paterfamilias — that no longer suits the
times. Instead, they need to become more comfortable as part-time
homemakers, as emotionally available soul mates, and they need to raise
their children to be more adaptive and expressive, to prepare them for a
knowledge-based, constantly-in-flux economy.
Like
most powerful ideas, this argument is founded on real truths. For
Americans of every social class, the future of marriage will be more
egalitarian, with more shared burdens and blurrier divisions of labor,
or it will not be at all. And the broad patterns of upper-class family
life do prepare children for knowledge-based work in ways that
working-class family life does not.
But
the idea that progressive attitudes can save working-class marriages
also has some real problems. First, it underestimates the effective
social conservatism of the upper-class model of family life — the
resilience of traditional gender roles in work and child rearing, the
continued role of religion in stabilizing well-educated family life, and
the conservative messages encoded even in the most progressive
education.
Notwithstanding
their more egalitarian attitudes, for instance, college-educated
households still tend to have male primary breadwinners: As the
University of Virginia’s Brad Wilcox points out,
college-educated husbands and fathers earn about 70 percent of their
family’s income on average, about the same percentage as working-class
married couples.
The college-educated are also now more likely to attend church than other Americans, and are much less likely to cohabit
before marriage than couples without a high school degree. And despite a
rhetorical emphasis on Emersonian self-reliance, children reared and
educated in the American meritocracy arguably learn a different sort of
lesson — the hypersupervised caution of what my colleague David Brooks
once dubbed “the organization kid.”
Near the end of “Labor’s Love Lost,”
his illuminating new book on the decline of the working-class family,
the Johns Hopkins sociologist Andrew Cherlin cites research suggesting
that many working-class men, far from being trapped in an antique
paradigm of “restricted emotional language,” have actually thrown
themselves into therapeutic, “spiritual but not religious” questing,
substituting Oprah-esque self-help for more traditional forms of
self-conceiving and belonging.
Cherlin,
working from progressive premises, sees this as potentially good news: a
sign that these men are getting over Gary Cooper and preparing to
embrace the more egalitarian and emotionally open patterns of the upper
class.
But
given that this shift has coincided with lost ground for blue-collar
men, another interpretation seems possible. We may have a culture in
which the working class is encouraged to imitate what are sold as key
upper-class values — sexual permissiveness and self-fashioning,
spirituality and emotivism — when really the upper class is also held
together by a kind of secret traditionalism, without whose binding power
family life ends up coming apart even faster.
If
so, it needs to be more widely acknowledged, and even preached, that
what’s worth imitating in upper-class family life isn’t purely modern or
progressive, but a complex synthesis of new and old.
No comments:
Post a Comment