Annabel Crabb — ABC political reporter, Fairfax columnist, Walkley winner, TV host, mother-of-three and all-round superwoman — has written a book.
It’s called The Wife Drought, and it argues that to achieve true gender equality, women need to start taking wives. Well, sort of.
“I use this term ‘wife’ as sort of a wink towards the concept of the stay-at-home wife,” Crabb says. “We think of the concept (of “wife”) as a bit outdated, but the patterns throughout Australian society are still there.”
Crabb points out that while women have been successful in taking on more paid work over the last five decades, they have largely maintained their unpaid jobs at home too – a trend that spells bad news for women.
“This is free-and-easy, egalitarian Australia’s intriguing little secret; our attachment to the male-breadwinner model is deep and robust,” she writes in the book.
“The obligation that evolves for working mothers, in particular, is a very precise one; the feeling that one ought to work as if one did not have children, while raising one’s children as if one did not have a job,” she says.
“To do any less feels like failing at both.”
We wanted to know more about Crabb’s call to action — and how she manages the work-life juggle herself — so we sat down to interview her about everything from paternity leave, to choosing the right man, to jellying her breast milk (yep, really).
Top Comments
Annabel presents the full time working woman's perspective. I earnt more than my partner when I chose to return to work part time following the birth of my only child at 40 (after two pregnancies which did not go full term). I don't need a wife. I would not miss the time I have with my now 4 year old. No one pushed me to change my working patterns. I am a feminist and as a gen X child of divorced parents I fully value being financially independent, which I am, but I'm not missing what I know is the most beautiful time of my life with my boy.
We at Femme Fiscal love the quote: “The obligation that evolves for working mothers, in particular, is a very precise one; the feeling that one ought to work as if one did not have children, while raising one’s children as if one did not have a job."
It is so true that the burden on women remains the same in the home even when their career loads have increased. This is a societal norm that needs to continually be challenged and we salute Annabel Crabb for leading the way for women. Australian women are superheros and their partners need to support them so that they can enjoy life too and reap the rewards of their hard work.