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CH 11: Looking at the Past and Across Cultures WHAT IS HISTORICAL-COMPARATIVE RESEARCH (HCR)? HCR places historical time and/or cross-cultural variation at the center ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CH 11: Looking at the Past and Across Cultures


1
CH 11 Looking at the Past and Across Cultures
2
WHAT IS HISTORICAL-COMPARATIVE RESEARCH (HCR)?
  • HCR places historical time and/or cross-cultural
    variation at the center of analysis
  • HCR looks at how a specific mix of diverse
    factors come together in time and place to
    produce a specific outcome (e.g., war, social
    movement, migration, etc.)
  • HCR makes big comparisons, of units like
    nation-states, societies, cultures, to see how
    they are similar and different
  • HCR examines social processes across several
    cultural or historical settings

3
What research questions are suitable for HCR?
  • Big questions about macro-level change over
    time (across historical eras) or in two or more
    sociocultural contexts
  • When the goal is to understand/explain
    macro-level events
  • e.g., a terrorist attack, a nation going to war,
    sources of racism, large-scale immigration,
    religious conflict, urban decay, etc.
  • Do people who immigrate form attachments to their
    new country or stay connected across
    international borders?
  • What about the questions that drive the article,
    Nannies, Maids and Sex Workers in the New
    Economy?

4
CONCEPTUALIZATION
  • Write down all the concepts you can recall from
    Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New
    Economy
  • Sort concepts into groups, classify them

5
Concepts can be grouped in various ways, for
example
  • social structures
  • social processes
  • social relations
  • social actors
  • activities
  • events
  • social contexts/locations/populations

6
Concepts can also be arranged on a continuum,
from specific to universal
  • universal concepts apply across social settings,
    historical time, and culture
  • specific concepts apply only to particular social
    settings, historical eras, or cultures
  • Many concepts fall between these extremes
  • (Neumann, pp. 299-300)

7
H-C research uses a blend of research techniques
  • traditional history, field research, interviews,
    content analysis, existing statistics, etc.

8
Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New
Economy
  • Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild,
    in Rothenberg, Ed., Beyond Borders Thinking
    Critically About Global Issues, 2006.

9
With globalization, women are on the move as
never before
  • Theres growing migration of millions of women
    from poor countries to rich ones, where they
    serve as nannies, maids and sex workers
  • Lacking help from male partners, many women have
    succeeded in male world careers only by turning
    over care of children, elderly parents, and homes
    to women from the Third World

10
The female underside of globalization
  • Millions of women from poor countries in the
    south migrate to do the womens work of the
    north work that affluent women are no longer
    able or willing to do
  • Migrant women often leave their own children back
    home, in the care of grandmothers, sisters, and
    sisters-in-law

11
The pattern of female migration reflects a
worldwide gender revolution
  • In both rich and poor countries, fewer families
    can rely solely on a male breadwinner
  • In the U.S., the earning power of most men has
    declined since 1970, and many women have gone to
    work to make up the difference
  • ? So who will take care of the children, the
    sick, the elderly?

12
Hypothesis The lifestyles of the First World
are made possible by a global transfer of the
services associated with a wifes traditional
rolechild care, homemaking, and sexfrom poor
countries to rich ones.
13
To generalize and perhaps oversimplify
  • In an earlier phase of imperialism, northern
    countries extracted natural resources and
    agricultural products from lands they colonized
  • Today, while still relying on Third World
    countries for agricultural and industrial labor,
    the wealthy countries also seek to extract
    something harder to measure and quantify, that
    can look very much like love.

14
Historical precedents for the globalization of
traditional female services
  • In the ancient Middle East, the women of
    populations defeated in war were routinely
    enslaved and to serve as household workers and
    concubines for the victors
  • Among the Africans brought to North America as
    slaves in the 16th 19th centuries, about 1/3
    were women children, and many became concubines
    and domestic servants
  • 19th century Irishwomenand rural Englishwomen--
    migrated to English towns and cities to work as
    domestics in homes of growing upper middle class

15
The feminization of migration
  • From 1950 1970, men predominated in labor
    migration to northern Europe from Turkey, Greece,
    and North Africa
  • Since then, women have been replacing men
  • In 1946, women were fewer than 3 of the
    Algerians and Moroccans living in France by
    1990, they were more than 40
  • Overall, half of the worlds 120 million legal
    and illegal migrants are now believed to be women
  • Patterns of international migration vary from
    region to region, but women migrants from a
    surprising of sending countries actually
    outnumber men, sometimes by a wide margin (See
    pp. 533-534)

16
Composition of household workforce in US has
changed with the life chances of different ethnic
groups
  • In late 19th century, Irish and German immigrants
    served the northern upper and middle classes,
    then left for factories as soon as they could
  • Black women replaced them, accounting for 60 of
    all domestics in the late 1940s, and dominated
    the field until other occupations opened up
  • West coast maids were disproportionately Japanese
    American until that group found better options
  • Today, ethnicity of workforce varies by region
    Chicanas in the Southwest, Caribbeans in New
    York, native Hawaiians in Hawaii, whites, mostly
    rural, in Maine
  • (Ehreneich, Maid to Order The Politics of Other
    Womens Work Harper's, 4/1/2000)

17
The globalization of womens work is NOT a simple
synergy of needs among women
  • Fails to account for failure of First World
    governments to meet the needs created by womens
    entry into workforce
  • The American andto a lesser degreeEuropean
    welfare state has become a deadbeat dad
  • US does not offer public child care, nor insure
    paid family and medical leave
  • Omits the role of men, who still do less than
    their fair share of domestic work
  • Often leaving working women with a second shift

18
Push factors not so simple either
  • Female migrants are not the most impoverished, so
    absolute poverty not a push factor
  • They are typically more affluent and better
    educated than male migrants
  • Such women are likely to be enterprising and
    adventurous enough to resist the social pressures
    to stay home and accept their lot in life
  • Noneconomic factors also influence decision to
    migrate
  • To escape expectation to care for elderly family
    members, to give paychecks to husband or father,
    to defer to an abusive husband
  • A practical response to divorce or need to raise
    children as single mother
  • Other factors may make men of poor countries less
    desirable as husbands (e.g., unemployment and
    related social problems such as alcoholism and
    gambling)

19
Globalization of child care housework brings
independent women of the world togetherbut not
as sisters allies with common goals
  • Instead they come together across a great divide
    of privilege and opportunity
  • A global relationship has formed that in some
    ways mirrors the traditional relationship between
    the sexes
  • The First World takes on a role like that of the
    old-fashioned male in the family
  • Poor countries take on a role like that of the
    traditional woman within the family
  • A division of labor feminists critiqued when it
    was local has now, metaphorically speaking,
    gone global

20
What is Unique about HCR?
  • Builds on Limited and Indirect Evidence
  • Interprets the Meaning of Events in Context
  • -Supracontext awareness
  • -Coherence imposition
  • -Capacity overestimation
  • Integrates the Micro and Macro Levels
  • Uses Specific and Transcultural, Transhistorical
    Concepts

21
HOW TO DO A HCR RESEARCH STUDY
  • Acquire the necessary background
  • Conceptualize the issue
  • Locate and evaluate the evidence
  • Organize the evidence
  • Synthesize and develop concepts
  • Write the report

22
RESEARCHING THE PAST
Historians and social researchers study the past
in different ways
  • Historians
  • See collection of historical evidence as central
    goal in itself
  • Interpret data in light of other historical
    events
  • Are not overly concerned about developing theory
  • Social researchers
  • See collection of historical evidence as
    secondary
  • Want to extend or build theory or apply social
    concepts to new situations
  • Use historical evidence as a means to an end to
    explain/understand social relations

23
Types of Historical Evidence
  • Primary sources
  • Running records
  • Recollections
  • Secondary sources

24
Primary sources and their limitations
  • primary sources sources created in the past and
    that survived to the present
  • presentism the fallacy of looking at past events
    from the point of view of today and failing to
    adjust for a very different context
  • ethnocentrism as applied in comparative
    research, the fallacy of looking at the
    behaviors, customs, and practices of people in
    other cultures narrowly from your cultures point
    of view

25
Evaluating primary sources
  • After locating documents, you must evaluate them
    with external and internal criticism
  • external criticism evaluating the authenticity
    of primary source materials
  • internal criticism evaluating the credibility of
    information in primary source materials

26
Running records and their limitations
  • Running records ongoing files or statistical
    documents that an organization such as a school,
    business, hospital, or government agency
    maintains over time
  • Limitations
  • organizations do not always maintain them
  • organizations do not record information
    consistently over time

27
Recollections and their limitations
  • recollections a persons words or writings about
    past experiences created by the person some time
    after the experiences took place
  • oral history interviews with a person about his
    or her life and experiences in the past
  • Limitation because memory is imperfect,
    recollections and oral histories can be distorted
    pictures of the past in ways primary sources are
    not

28
Secondary sources and their limitations
  • secondary sources specific studies conducted by
    specialist historians who may have spent many
    years studying a narrow topic. Other researchers
    use these secondary data as sources.
  • Limitations
  • Holes or gaps in the historical record and few
    studies on your topic
  • Inaccurate historical accounts
  • Biased interpretations
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