A Rhetorical Analysis: The Merging of Home and Work
Submitted to SDCCD
(September 6, 2012)
Are business conferences
from one’s own kitchen becoming a new set of normalcy? “This merger can have positive influences on
family togetherness and interdependence” Montgomery 1018), but whether you are working
from your desk at home or in an office, can the world still consider you as a professional? We
will find out more on this subject through the essay of Kitchen Conferences & Garage
Cubicles: The Merger of Home and Work in the 24-7 Global Economy. The author is Alesia Montgomery, an African American
ethnographer and someone who enjoys observing not only the
differences, but as well as the likenesses that can be found in the diversity of ethnic and religious
groups. My attempt is to write a rhetorical analysis about her work and to lead the audience to
discover the main point of Montgomery’s article which has a lot to do with merging home and
work, to give you a better understanding of whether or not making this change is really
worth it; why the author believes it, how she proves it, what she uses to support her beliefs and
who she is trying to reach out to from within her audience.
The author states that “Far from weakening family bonds, these mergers of home and work foster family cohesion.” (Montgomery 1010) We can see this throughout the previous examples and information that she has provided for her audience. The book “Women, Work & Family” supports the idea that the aspect of women working, whether or not it was taking place within the home, allowed for women to “balance her productive and domestic activities.” (Tilly and Scott 51) Montgomery has also used her study with Marjaneh and Steve to show us that “unlike relations in the old middle class of shopkeepers, these mergers are not necessarily male-dominated.” (Montgomery 1010) I can attest to this for myself. Before my school days I can remember my mother was able to make a side income from my father’s by doing custom sewing from bridal dresses to some rich lady’s cat! She received clients in our living room and sewed all day from her bedroom. My brother and I were always able to accompany her when her business forced her to sometimes leave the house for private fittings, the purchasing of fabrics and such other things as these. Though many of her hours throughout the day were spent sewing, I never once felt neglected. While she sewed I’d be sitting on her bed, trying out that knitting technique she had taught me and all the while talking or singing together. Even though she no longer does this, through that experience I gained my own knowledge from what I learned from my mother and her work through those years. Like Alesia Montgomery said, “The collaborations of Marjaneh and her family increased togetherness and interdependence” (Montgomery 1010). The same has happened with my family and I can say for myself that it is possible to work 24-7 within the home without causing a disruption.
The author has done a satisfactory
job in bringing her ideas around in a very convincing way
to her readers; first, as a narrative because of her open example of Steve and
Marjaneh. Secondly,
from reading her conclusion it is easy to see how descriptive she was from the beginning
to show how there life was before and what their lives have resulted in due to
those changes.
She did include some compare and
contrast within the organization of her work but not much,
mostly near the end.
Like when she says, "I do not mean to suggect that merging home and work has no downsides" (Montgomery 1018). In that she was truthful, but she was
by far leaning
vastly on the positive side of this idea with sufficient proofs and examples to
make one believe
in it. Enough has been mentioned throughout this rhetorical analysis essay to
hint towards
whom Montgomery wishes to reach out to within the audience. All examples have
been pointing
towards husbands and wives, their children, in one word—the families. More
often than naught
she points out the positive views to show that it is very possible to have a
type of dynamic
working family and to promote this ideology to those who have never considered
it or ever
deemed it possible. We know now as a fact that families can successfully work
together in the home.
The importance of this essay by Alesia Montgomery is to open the eyes of her readers to see an alternative way of living; one that allows for family involvement when it comes to merging home and work. To those who don’t like new changes, she digs back into history to lead us to a better understanding of her idea. Just as communications have come a long way, from letters to e-mails and transportation, from coaches to cars, this is no different. It is not a foreign concept at all. Just an old idea that has been able to pull through time and modernize along with other updates that have been made throughout history. She is showing us the possibility of a better living; that working together at home can bring unity within the family. This is something worth considering in these times. Don’t you think?
Work Cited
Lamentations. The Holy Bible. Grand Rapids:
Zondervan House, 1962. 381. Print.
Montgomery, Alesia. "Kitchen Conferences
and Garage Cubicles: The Merger of Home and Work in the 24-7 Global Economy
(excerpt)." 2000. Everything's an Argument with readings. 5th ed.
Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martins, 2010. 1008-1022. Print.
Pycior, Helena M., Nancy G. Slack, and
Pnina G. Abir-Am, eds 1996. Creative couples in the sciences. New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Print
Scott, Joan W. and Tilly, Louise A. "Urban
Women." Women, Work, and Family. 2nd ed. New York: Methuen, 1987.
47-51. Print.