Occupation
Visiting Assistant/Associate Professor
Contact
ABOUT
M. Ruth Dike is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Louisville. She was born and raised in Memphis, TN. Ruth holds a Bachelor of Arts in Honors Anthropology from the University of Tennessee Knoxville, a Master of Liberal Arts in Gastronomy from Boston University and a PhD from the University of Kentucky. Funded by a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Grant, her dissertation explored how Moroccan family life is changing, with regards to the gendered negotiations of reproductive and paid labor and the cultural meaning and lived experience of contemporary middle-class identities. Reproductive labor is broadly defined as unpaid and paid labor associated with care giving and domestic roles including but not limited to cleaning, cooking, and child care. While the majority of existing research on reproductive labor uses quantitative methods which pre-formulates participants’ responses, this project employs a fine-grained ethnographic approach to explore everyday practices in the household in order to uncover participants’ own reasons and strategies for negotiating reproductive labor in the way they do.
Discipline
Anthropology
Sub Areas
Diaspora/Refugee Studies
Gender/Women's Studies
Globalization
Maghreb Studies
Geographic Areas of Interest
Morocco
Specialties
Reproductive Labor, Family, Labor & Identity, Food
Languages
Arabic (advanced)
Education
PhD
| 2021
| Anthropology
| University of Kentucky
MA
| 2018
| Anthropology
| University of Kentucky
MA
| 2014
| Gastronomy
| Boston University
BA
| 2012
| Anthropology
| University of Tennessee: Knoxville
Abstracts
Men “Doing Domesticity:” Reproductive Labor & Gendered Subjectivities in Urban Morocco