首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Don’t Fear the Male Babysitter For decades, boys, not girls, were seen as the ideal people to take care of children. Why did
Don’t Fear the Male Babysitter For decades, boys, not girls, were seen as the ideal people to take care of children. Why did
admin
2022-10-28
11
问题
Don’t Fear the Male Babysitter
For decades, boys, not girls, were seen as the ideal people to take care of children. Why did that change?
A) The very thought of a male babysitter (保姆) is enough to make some parents anxious. Every online parenting forum seems to have a thread on the issue of male babysitters, such as "Hiring a Male Babysitter (or Manny) " on the site Park Slope Parents. In a satire (讽刺作品) on The Onion titled "Desperate Mom Okays Male Babysitter," the mom normally wouldn’t hire a male babysitter and knew it wasn’t ideal, but she really needed the night off.
B) In an article for the Washington Post earlier this year, author Petula Dvorak hires a male babysitter and realizes it "is apparently something few parents would do." She said she received raised eyebrows from other parents at the playground when she introduced the new sitter and felt compelled to explain how long she’s known him and how much she likes him to anyone who would listen. "When it comes to kids, we are pretty close to being a society that has demonized (妖魔化) men," Dvorak writes, noting that a government study found that in 96 percent of sexual assaults on children the offenders were male.
C) This anxiety about male babysitters is remarkable when you look at the history of babysitting. Throughout the twentieth century, boys were not only as accepted as babysitters, they were often preferred over girls. The reason is twofold: Teenage girls were dismissed as flighty (轻浮的) and selfish; and young boys needed male role models as their fathers were unemployed during the Great Depression or gone all week at work in the latter half of the century.
D) According to Miriam Forman-Brunell, a history professor and the author of Babysitter: An American History, babysitting in its modern incarnation (化身) came about in the 1920s, with "the expansion of suburbs for the first time." Parents were more likely to be separated from extended family members that once were relied on to watch children. Coincidentally, the 1920s also gave rise to the notion of a modern teenage girl who cared more about boys, movies and makeup than taking care of kids. To adults, the rise of the teenage girl signaled disorder and fueled anxieties.
E) As Forman-Brunell writes, because adolescent girls "attended sports events and flirted with men on the street corners, especially in front of the innocent babies they took care of," the authors of a popular mid-1920s child-rearing manual criticized adolescent girls and dismissed them as acceptable child-care providers.
F) Although babysitting first appeared in the 1920s, it didn’t flourish as a cultural phenomenon until after World War II. The baby boom created plentiful jobs for babysitters. Still, though women had enjoyed greater employment opportunities during World War II, parents were hesitant to use a female babysitter. During this period, "parents were very anxious about hiring the girl next door, as has always been the case. It just has so much to do with their perception of teenage girls," says Forman-Brunell.
G) Even as teenage girls were provoking anxiety in parents, male babysitters were idealized as the perfect solution. During the Great Depression, Forman-Brunell says, unemployed adolescent boys became "saviours (救星) to upset mothers and tired housewives unsatisfied with neighborhood girls."
H) In glowing descriptions in Parents Magazine from the 1930s, it seemed as if there was nothing boy helpers couldn’t do. Some child-rearing experts during the Great Depression believed that male babysitters could go so far as to "restore boyhood" for their young charges. While husbands became depressed due to unemployment or deserted their families, Parents Magazine reassured readers that boys were up to the task of babysitting.
I) "It’s surprising that you would find the entrepreneurial, perfect male babysitter in popular culture, but he’s everywhere," says Forman-Brunell, "and he’s not burdened by the same expectations that girls are." Being smart, competitive, and business-oriented were all considered positive characteristics of a male babysitter.
J) By the late 1940s, some Ivy-League schools institutionalized babysitting for male college students. For example, Forman-Brunell writes, male undergraduates at Princeton organized the "Tiger Tot Tending Agency" where, beginning in 1946, "college boys babysat for the children of faculty members and married students for thirty-five cents an hour." One mother who hired male babysitters through the Tiger Tot agency told Princeton Alumni Weekly, "I loved the idea of four tall and strong young men watching over my baby daughter. Diapers (尿布) were changed with efficiency and calmness." Four men came for the price of one babysitter so they could have enough people for a bridge game.
K) A 1940s New Yorker article reported that the Columbia University football coach—a former babysitter himself—created a sitting service for his players and was just as proud of their babysitting accomplishments as their hard work on the football field. The strong babysitters were able to maintain their manliness while caring for children. While tales of hellish babysitter experiences with teenage girls who racked up phone bills and ignored screaming children in order to be with their boyfriends continued to populate the media, so did accounts of capable, responsible male babysitters.
L) When fathers were away at work in the 1950s, it was up to male sitters to instill manliness in young boys and turn boys into hardy men. A Life Magazine cover story reported that 23 percent of the 7.9 million boys in the United States worked as babysitters in 1957, collectively earning an estimated $319 million.
M) Even as gender differences began to blur in the 1970s, male babysitters were still seen as an ideal, as is apparent in the children’s book George the Babysitter (1977). Long-haired George would cook and clean each day for the kids he babysat, and at the end of the day liked to sit and read a football magazine. The book made teenage boy babysitters seem both domestic and masculine. Up until the end of the 20th century, popular culture and children’s books such as Arthur Babysits (1992) and Jerome the Babysitter (1995) boosted the reputation of teenage boys as smart, dependable babysitters.
N) But today babysitting is most commonly viewed as a woman’s domain. A Red Cross Babysitter Training Course video shows two women, one white and one black, babysitting. But there are no male sitters in the video. According to a Wall Street Journal article published earlier this year, Sittercity.com, an online marketplace for babysitting, has 94 percent female sitters, while SmartSitting.com, an agency that matches highly educated sitters with New York families reports that 87 percent of its sitters are female.
O) Men have been so erased from the history of babysitting that the same Wall Street Journal article wrongly compares babysitting with cooking, saying, "Could childcare someday go the way of cooking? In the 1950s everyone assumed that women were better in the kitchen…these days, of course, cooking is gender neutral." The writer imagines a time in the future when babysitting "is no longer considered a girl’s job." Little does she know that up until about 20 years ago, it wasn’t a girl’s job.
The media of the 1940s described teenage girls as bad babysitters and boys as responsible ones.
选项
答案
K
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/wmvD777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Payandproductivity,itisgenerallyassumed,shouldberelated.Buttherelationshipseemstoweaken【C1】________peoplegetold
Payandproductivity,itisgenerallyassumed,shouldberelated.Buttherelationshipseemstoweaken【C1】________peoplegetold
Whenmymotherlearnedshewaspregnantwithme,myparentssatdownoneSundaymorningtoreviewtheirfinances.Turningonthe
Oneofthemostalarmingthingsaboutthecrisisintheglobalfinancialsystemisthatthewarningsignshavebeenouttherefo
Duetohistoricalreasons,peopleintheCzechRepubliclacked________.
Agingbabyboomersaredeterminedtofighttheagingprocess.Theyspendmillionsofdollarsayearon【C1】________theyperceive
Agingbabyboomersaredeterminedtofighttheagingprocess.Theyspendmillionsofdollarsayearon【C1】________theyperceive
WhatcanbesaidaboutthereportbytheNationalAcademyofSciences?
Onemorning,Iwaswaitingatthebusstop,worriedabout【K1】________(be)lateforschool.Thereweremanypeoplewaitingat
Onemorning,Iwaswaitingatthebusstop,worriedabout【K1】________(be)lateforschool.Thereweremanypeoplewaitingat
随机试题
患者,男,82岁。小便浑浊如米泔水,上有浮油,置之沉淀,有絮状凝块物,尿道热涩疼痛,尿时阻塞不畅,口干,苔黄腻,舌质红,脉濡数。该患者治疗时,宜首选
11个月小儿,发热3天,体温39.0℃,呕吐2次,抽搐1次。体检:神志清,精神萎靡,皮肤无出血点,前囟稍隆起,颈略抵抗,Barbinski征阳性。曾于半岁时有高热惊厥1次。
手足口病好发于
男52岁,1周来出现阵发性夜间心前区闷胀,伴出汗,每次持续约10分钟,能自行缓解,白天可正常工作。1小时前在熟睡中再发心前区胀痛,明显压抑感,自服速效救心丸无效,症状持续不缓解而来院。既往体健,无类似发作。入院查心电图呈心前区导联ST段抬高。该患者最可能的
表面活性剂的应用不包括
患者,男性,72岁。慢性阻塞性肺气肿病史20多年。今日傍晚进餐时一米粒呛入气管引起剧烈咳嗽,突然呼吸困难,右胸刺痛,逐渐加重。最可能是发生了
招标采购阶段的管理应根据整个项目采购工作的总体安排,应用()等方法制定总体采购计划和采购清单。
非承重外墙、房间隔墙不宜采用金属夹芯板材,当确需采用时,夹芯材料应为(),且符合对应构件的耐火极限要求。
下列不属于利益冲突要求的是()。
纳西族盛行不落夫家的婚俗。()
最新回复
(
0
)