Feminist Parenting: Perspectives from Africa and Beyond asks and considers:
What is feminist parenting? Is it something for all parents? What does it mean
to be a feminist parent in practice? The collection aims to fill a gap on
feminist parenting in the existing literature by bringing timely post-Western
perspectives.
This interdisciplinary anthology explores a wide range of intersecting issues contributing to and arising from gun violence. Millions of people are hurt and killed by gun violence globally, and the traumatic realities of these events are navigated by individuals and communities widely. In this context, gun violence fundamentally threatens social functioning in significant ways, and profoundly test the resilience of families. The resulting transformations carry social, political, legal and economic implications for mothering, family dynamics, and community engagement. This collaborative volume brings together diverse perspectives intended to deconstruct perceptions, realities, risks and impacts of gun violence, as seen by researchers, educators, community advocates, public health/health care experts, criminologists, social workers, field-based practitioners, and victims/survivors of gun violence. The distinct and broad range of contributions in this volume critically unpacks representations, stress and trauma, resilience, advocacy/activism, policymaking, family functioning, social justice and equity, governmentality and the criminal justice system, public health/health care, and com
Mothers, Community, and Friendship is an anthology that explores the complexities of mothering/motherhood, communities, and friendship from across interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives. The chapters in this text not only examine how communities and friendship shape and influence the various spectrums of motherhood, but also analyze how communities and friendship are necessary for mothers. Through personal, reflective, critical essays, and ethnographies, this collection situates the ways mothers are connected to communities and how these relationships forms, such as in mothering groups and maternal friendships. By calling attention to these central and current topics, Mothers, Community, and Friendship represents how communities and friendship become means of empowerment for mothers.
Plenty has been published on body image but image suggests a static fixed body
unmitigated through our social interactions and varying times and spaces. This
book is not a'how-to' guide for fat confidence. It's not a compendium of fat
suffering. It's simply a collection of narratives about what it's like to
survive in a weight-hating world.
Moving Meals and Migrating Mothers: Culinary cultures, diasporic dishes and
familial foodways explores the complex interplay between the important global
issues of food, families and migration. We have an introduction and twelve
additional chapters which we have organised into three parts: Part I Moving
Meals, Markets and Migrant Mothers
This edited volume explores how and why immigrant/refugee mothers’ experiences differ due to the challenges posed by the migration process, but also what commonalities underline immigrant/refugee mothers’ lived experiences. This book will add to the field of women’s studies the much-needed discussion of how immigrant and refugee mothers’ lives are dependent on cultural, environmental and socio-economic circumstances. The collection offers multiple perspectives on migrant mothering by including ethnographic and theoretical submissions along with mothers’ personal narratives and literary analyses from diverse New Zealand, Japan, Canada, The United States, Turkey, Italy and the Netherlands among others. The first section of the volume focuses on mothers’ roles in the family institution and the pressures and responsibilities they face in “creating” and “reproducing” families physically and socially. The second section shifts its attention to children and highlights mothers’ continued roles in the development of their children abroad, along with the gendered/generational dynamics in the settlement process and the resultant effects on motherhood responsibilities. In all chapters, readers will find how women negotiate their traditional roles in a new sociocultural milieu, and how mothering processes are critical in creating connections with traditions and homelands.
From dour old women to buzzkills who can't take a joke, the stereotype of the
humourless feminist has repeatedly been deployed to derail and delegitimize
the women's rights movement. This collection skips the tired debates that ask
whether feminists can be funny - we know the answer to this already - to
instead investigate contemporary expressions
Traditional midwifery, culture, customs, understandings, and meanings
surrounding pregnancy and birth are grounded in distinct epistemologies and
worldviews that have sustained Indigenous women and their families since time
immemorial.
Mothers, Sex, and Sexuality talks about things not normally dared spoken out
loud - the interconnectedness and conflict between our parental and sexual
selves, the taboo of the sexual mother, and why it matters so much to shatter
it. What is it about the sexual mother that is incompatible, and at times even
disturbing?
Parenting/Internet/Kids, with three key terms slashed together, conveys the idea that the practice of parenting may extend both to the Internet and to our children - to the extent that both require attention, care and forms of regulation, and, in turn, provide support and enjoyment. While the triadic title is somewhat playful, it also strikes a serious note and introduces layered possibilities: we are not simply raising children who have grown up in the internet age, but also Domesticating Technologies by "managing" the computer (relatively young in age, too, having established itself in homes in the 1980s). Including perspectives from scholars and parents living in Australia, Canada, India, Japan, the UK and the USA, the collection examines how the intimate presence of computer technology in our homes and on our bodies affects not only mothers and parenting, but family life more broadly