Murphy, Ryan Patrick2011-02-232011-02-232010-12https://hdl.handle.net/11299/100749University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2010. Major: American Studies. Advisor: Dr. Jennifer L. Pierce. 1 computer file (PDF); xiii, 325 pages.This dissertation historically analyzes the working lives and activism of flight attendants in the U.S. airline industry since 1970. During that period, I trace the emergence of what I call the "family values economy." Given three decades of neoliberal reforms, working people have been less able to count on living-wage jobs or on the state for material support. Traditional family relationships have had to make up for such austerity, with fathers, mothers, and children turning the household into a space to pool the resources of multiple low-paying service jobs. Since flight attendants' work schedules keep them away from home for weeks at a time, and because of involvement in feminist and LGBT movements long critical of "family values" agendas, I argue that flight attendants are uniquely positioned to challenge the reorganization of the economy around traditional family. Flight attendants have thus demanded and won new resources for the alternative arrangements in which they live: as single people, as unmarried parents, as same-sex couples, and as cohabitating friends. The dissertation therefore contributes to labor, gender, and sexuality studies by showing how politicizing family has sustained flight attendants' vigorous push to contest economic inequality.en-USFlight attendantsGovernment regulationLabor historyNeoliberalismPolitical economySexuality studiesAmerican StudiesOn our own: flight attendant labor and the family values economy.Thesis or Dissertation