Stephanie coonts is a historian of family life at evergreen state college. We asked her about how coupledam has changed overtime. For thousands of years, marriage was really not about love. People didn't work at their marriages. They worked in their marriages. Marriage used to be structured around women's complete economic dependence on men rat well, yes.
Simmering resentments over whose career comes first. Bickering over household tasks. Arguments over who should pick up the kids this time. This is the portrait of two-career coupledom in much of the popular media. But for a lot of couples, the reality is much rosier. Mutually supportive relationships let us take career risks, help us be more resilient to setbacks, and even “lean in” at work. In this episode, we talk with three experts to help us paint a picture of what a truly supportive dual-career relationship looks like, and understand how to get our own relationships closer to that ideal. Guests: Jennifer Petriglieri, Avivah Wittenberg-Cox, and Stephanie Coontz.
Our theme music is Matt Hill’s “City In Motion,” provided by Audio Network.
For links to the articles mentioned in this episode, as well as other information about the show, visit hbr.org/podcasts/women-at-work.