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Gender & Society, Vol. 3, No. 1, 89-104 (1989)
DOI: 10.1177/089124389003001006


Conference

WOMEN AS FATHERS:

Motherhood and Child Care Under a Modified Patriarchy

BARBARA KATZ ROTHMAN

Baruch College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York

Although the modern American kinship system is nominally a bilateral system, the very definition of kin ties is based on the principles of patriarchy. Women do not gain their rights to their children in this society as mothers, but as father-equivalents, sources of genetic material. In child rearing as in childbearing, women may take on the role of fathers to their children, substituting poorer women to do the traditional mothering work. The resultant recasting of the classic Oedipal drama in terms of class and race rather than gender is described. This article argues that we must move beyond patriarchal definitions of the relations between parents and children, and beyond modifications that simply extend to some women, most often at cost to other women, some of the privileges of patriarchy.


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