SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
The writer points out that, unlike the case in Britain, in some cultures ____
Work is central in British culture. When someone asks
one ‘What do you do?', they really mean ‘What work do
you do?'. When a woman is asked ‘Do you work?', what is
meant is ‘Are you doing a paid job?'. Yet many people
without a paid job work at other kinds of productive
activities. Women, notably, perform an unpaid ‘double
shift' in the home as housekeepers and mothers. To
confine the term ‘work' to paid employment, therefore,
restricts it far too narrowly. There are many other kinds of
work, some of which can take more time and energy than
we put into our paid employment from the voluntary
working in the garden to repairs to the house or the car. In
other cultures, work is not as highly valued as this; some
people value leisure more, and work only as much as they
need in order to provide basic necessities.