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B01=Maria Fannin
B01=Maud Perrier
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Refiguring the Postmaternal: Feminist Responses to the Forgetting of Motherhood

English

This book explores the concept of the postmaternal as a response to changing cultural, political and economic conditions for motherhood and responds to Julie Stephens contention that gender-neutral feminism has led to a forgetting of the maternal within feminist memory. In Confronting Postmaternal Thinking: Feminism, Memory, Care (2011) Stephens identifies a significant cultural anxiety about care-giving, nurturing and human dependency she calls postmaternal thinking. Stephens argues that maternal forms of care have been rejected in the public sphere and marginalised to the private domain through an elaborate process of cultural forgetting, in turn contributing to the current dominance of a degendered form of feminism.

This book argues that refiguring postmaternalism requires opening up the maternal beyond the category of mothers and the nuclear family. The chapters in this edited volume contribute to the field of maternal studies by investigating the connections between maternalism, feminism and neoliberalism through diverse feminist theories, cases and methodologies. We challenge Stephens diagnosis of the forgetting of certain forms of maternal practices from feminisms history by highlighting the ongoing contested place of the maternal in feminist scholarship and activism for the last five decades. We argue that the memorializing of the maternal in feminist scholarship needs to reflect its diverse legacies in the analyses of black feminism, socialist feminism and ecofeminism in order to destabilise the association of the maternal with neoliberalism and the depoliticization of feminism. This book was originally published as a special issue of Australian Feminist Studies.

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Product Details
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780367892968

About

Maria Fannin is Reader in Human Geography in the School of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol UK. Her research focuses on the social and economic dimensions of health medicine and technology particularly in relation to reproduction and womens health. She has conducted research on commercial cord blood banking conceptualisations of hoarding and exchange in the biological tissue economy and feminist geographical approaches to a bodily commons in a post- genomic age. She is currently researching the multiple forms of value attached to human placental tissue in the biosciences medicine and alternative health practices. Her work has appeared in Body & Society Feminist Theory and New Genetics & Society. Maud Perrier is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Bristol UK. Her research interests include feminist pedagogies emotions arts based methodologies class and contemporary mothering. She is currently investigating women food social entrepreneurs in Sydney Australia with Elaine Swan. She has published in Sociology Sociological Review Sociological Research Online Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies Humanities Gender and Education and Feminist Formations.

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