Kylie Fahnestock

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Women usually work a “second shift” at home on top of their paid work, taking on much of the care of children and housework.[2] Then there’s the “third shift,” which builds on Arlie Hochschild’s metaphor, and has been used to refer to the work of maintaining harmony in the marriage, learning about child development and assuming the psychological burden of the family’s emotional well-being.
Matrescence: On Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Motherhood
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