Answer:
Yes, there is still a stigma regarding woman's role in the home, society, and workplace.
Step-by-step explanation:
Today, women do not have it as bad as the women did in the book, Revolutionary Mothers, by Carol Berkin, but they are not completely free of the stigmas.
At home, many women may be told that they have to clean up after their husbands, be the one who takes care of the children, and cook, because men have been taught that a good wife does all of those things. Even though it is not as prominent as it was in the book, it is still not gone. Many men don't take care of or bond with their children because they don't see it as their job to do so. Same goes with cooking and cleaning, they don't think that men should have to pick up after themselves if they have a wife to do it for them.
Socially, men pick on women a lot. Women are seen as incompetent when it comes to working with cars, guns, motorcycles, and it is seen as a men's activity. Men think that because women are more "dainty" they "don't want to get their hands dirty". But that is not true. In the book, it was the same thing, but with factory working and working in a place that requires a lot of skill with technology and machines.
In the workplace, women are more likely to be rejected for positions like boss, manager, or executive because they are seen as "too moody" or controlling, or evil in some men's eyes. They may think that women are better suited for desk jobs, or filing paperwork, but that is not true. Many women who work in offices may be flooded with other men's paperwork because they don't want to do it, and women may be too shy to stand up for themselves and tell their coworkers to stop it. Some women who work in biochemistry labs may be left to clean the beakers and supplies after their male coworkers are done because "cleaning is a woman's work". They may even be excluded in research by sexist bosses who believe that they didn't do anything. In the Revolutionary Mothers, women were excluded from credit because they are "of less status", even though that is not true.