Abstract

Inconsistencies in the role sets of women in modern societies are believed by some to account for the difference in rates of mental illness between men and women. In an analysis of rates of neurotic disorders and functional psychoses, Gove (1972) found that the higher rates of mental illness for women, compared to those of men, were due to disproportionately high rates among married women. Gove and Tudor (1973) maintain that the reason for this is that married women are more likely to occupy conflicting role sets. They contend that the role of the housewife involves unskilled labor and low status, both of which are often not consonant with a woman's intellectual attainment. In addition, they argue that the married woman who works outside the home occupies a conflicting role set when her employment involves discrimination in the job market and assignment to positions that are not commensurate with her educational background. Gove and Tudor constructed their roleconflict model to explain mental health differences between women and men, but others have questioned this application. A persistent criticism has been that such between-gender

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