Artigo Acesso aberto

Gender Roles in Cuba: Leaving the Kitchen Isn’t Enough

2020; Volume: 22; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.37757/mr2020.v22.n1.7

ISSN

1555-7960

Tópico(s)

Cuban History and Society

Resumo

The scene: a family doctor-and-nurse offi ce. After the usual well-baby visit for the eight-month-old, the physician poses a question to the young mother that sounds more like a statement: I sup-pose you won't be going back to work, right? You'll be staying home to take care of your little girl. The mother, surprised, responds with a laugh: Of course not. As soon as she's a year old and walking, she'll be going to day care and I'll be going back to work. The doctor, a look of concern crossing her brow, responds: But once they start in day care, they catch all kinds of things. They're much safer at home. The mother, now unsmiling, says: Well, she'll just have to catch anti-bodies. Attempting a joke, the specialist sighs: Ah, my friend...and you've been such a good mother! Silence. How do you re-spond to this? Two truths are implicit in the commentary, thought the young mother. The fi rst, that the doctor wasn't sure at the outset that she was a good mother. And the other, that once she decides to send her daughter to day care, she stops being one.

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