[August 11th
marks the birthday of AmericanStudier pére, as well as one of the very best digital
humanists, scholarly writers,
and grandfathers I know, Steve Railton. In his honor, a series on some
noteworthy cultural and historical American fathers! Share your paternal
responses and reflections for the father of all crowd-sourced posts!]
On the
ways in which we’ve come pretty far in the last few decades—and the ways in
which we haven’t.
As
representative cultural documents go, I’m not sure you can find a more
embarrassingly telling one than the Michael Keaton comic film Mr. Mom (1983;
written by John Hughes). Fired from his job and forced to stay home while his
wife becomes the family’s sole breadwinner (returning to a promising career in
advertising she had abandoned once they had children), Keaton’s character
proves entirely, comically inept at—as just that hyperlinked minute and a half
long trailer illustrates—vacuuming, cooking, cleaning, grocery shopping, child
care, and even disposing of diapers in the trash, among other things. Even the
film’s title alone makes clear that the very idea of a married man performing
“Mom’s” roles is a source of comedy, a nonsensical paradox that can be solved
only by Keaton’s manic eyebrow wiggling. While of course the film could be read
as part of the
decade’s backlash against feminism, or as symbolizing cultural fears
about what the presence
of more women in the workforce might mean, it also clearly reveals
that the simple idea of a dad performing household activities was nothing short
of ludicrous to many Americans in the early 1980s.
Much has
changed in America in the three-plus decades since that film’s 1983 release, of
course, and one of the most striking such social changes has been the rise in the number
of fathers who are identified as their children’s primary caregiver. Recent
statistics for that trend can’t entirely be separated from the 2008 recession,
and thus from accidental and temporary situations and employment and role
changes not unlike those in the movie. Yet I believe that the trend is also
more long-term and intentional than that—my evidence is primarily anecdotal,
but I can most definitely say that within the families of many friends and
colleagues, and indeed across a high percentage of the families in my own
generation with which I’m familiar, fathers are choosing to (at the very least)
share evenly in the duties of home and childraising. And indeed in many cases,
including my own prior to my divorce, dads are, whether because of circumstance,
profession, inclination, or (often) a combination of all those factors, taking
on the majority of such duties. Call us
Mr. Mom if you want—the title no longer carries the same humorous sting.
And yet.
In a variety of ways, cultural narratives seem not to have changed nearly so
much. To cite one small but telling example, virtually every page of Parents magazine
is directed specifically at moms; there will usually be one article per issue
by a dad for dads or the like, but otherwise, this ostensibly gender-neutral
publication remains overtly and overwhelmingly focused on moms. The same is
true for almost every TV commercial featuring products for kids: “Mom, if
you’re looking to feed your kids healthier…,” and so on. And while I know that
such media and marketing choices are at least partly based on business and basic
statistics—if as this 2012 article argues
35% of dads are the primary caregiver, that still means the majority of primary
caregivers and thus readers/customers are moms—there are other cultural signs
as well. One of the much-hyped (if ultimately unsuccessful) recent TV comedies,
for example, was called Guys with Kids, a title
and set of marketing images that seem to suggest that the very idea of a man
with kids remains a source of comic ridiculousness. But at least the guys are
plural, so maybe Mr. Mom is evolving a bit. If so, I’d say it’s time.
Next father
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Fatherly texts or figures you’d highlight?
http://www.cosmopolitan.com/lifestyle/a59923/what-fathers-day-reminded-me-as-a-mom/
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that piece and important perspective!
ReplyDeleteI put a lot of pressure on myself as a Dad, but I agree that the broader societal conversations are different that way, which is a complement to some of what I'm noting here (that "parent" often codes first as "mom" in our societal conversations and narratives still).
Ben