Question

"Our Mothers' Grief: Racial-Ethnic Women and the Maintenance of Families," Bonnie Thornton Dill
Bonnie Thornton Dill broadens the dominant perspective of American families through this historical analysis of racial-ethnic women and their families. She demonstrates how the establishment of the "modern American family" ideal and expectations of racial and ethnic groups as sources of cheap labor created distinct familial experiences among women of various racial-ethnic groups in early America
According to Bonnie Thornton Dill which of the following reflects the double bind experienced by racial-ethnic women of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries?
a. Their required participation in the labor force denied them the status of socially acceptable women, wives, and mothers.
b. Their equal status in the labor force did not result in egalitarian relationships with their husbands.
c. The sacrifice they made by participating in the labor force was looked upon as admirable by dominant society.
d. Because they worked in the paid labor force they had to hire other women to care for their own homes and children.

Answer

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