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Essential breakthroughs : conversations about men, mothers, and mothering / edited by Fiona Joy Green and Gary Lee Pelletier. [electronic resource]

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Bradford, Ontario : Demeter Press, [2015]Copyright date: ©2015Description: 1 online resource (179 pages)ISBN:
  • 9781772580280 (e-book)
Other title:
  • Conversations about men, mothers and mothering
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Essential breakthroughs : conversations about men, mothers, and mothering.DDC classification:
  • 306.874/3 23
LOC classification:
  • HQ755.83 .E77 2015
Online resources:
Contents:
Foreward / Andrea Doucet -- Introduction / Gary Lee Pelletier and Fiona Joy Green -- Parental thinking: what does gender have to do with it? / Joanne S. Frye -- Does the manny mother? / Gary Lee Pelletier -- "Is he the son of no one?": a son's relational narrative on his mother / Nick J. Mulé -- Why isn't everyone celebrating me? My mom, bankruptcy, and my ego / Justin Butler -- Lesbian families, sons, and mothering: parenting outside the boundaries / Alys Einion -- Changing the gender script: Ecuadorian son's increased domesticity and emotive response to transnational mothering / Ruth Trinidad Galván -- TV's new dads: sensitive fatherhood and the return of hegemonic masculinity / Dwayne Avery -- What's so funny about childbirth? The projection of patriarchal masculinity in popular comedic childbirth guides / Jeffrey Nall -- Just along for the ride? A father-to-be searching for his role / C. Wesley Buerkle -- Mommie dearest: undoing a gay identity through pregnancy / Jack Hixson-Vulpe -- The ties that bind are broken: trans* breastfeeding practices, ungendering body parts, and unsexing parenting roles / A.J. Lowik -- Becoming mother's nature: a queer son's perspective on mothering in an era of ecological decline / Michael Young.
Summary: "Mothers, daughters and mothering have been a longtime focus of research and study in various academic disciplines, and common topics of interest in mainstream press and popular culture, yet the realities and experiences of sons, men, mothers and mothering have been less explored. In her 1980 article "Maternal Thinking" Sara Ruddick theorized, "although some men do, and more men should acquire maternal thinking, their ways of acquisition are necessarily different from ours (women's)". Feminist scholars during the 1990s and early 2000s, such as Audré Lorde (1993), Robin Morgan (1996), Babette Smith (1995), Robyn Rowland and Alison M. Thomas (1996), and those appearing in Andrea O'Reilly's 2001 edited collection Mothers and Sons address the role and struggle of mothers raising sons. And while Andrea Doucet directly explores the question of whether men mother in her book Do Men Mother (2006) and Gary Pelletier reflects on the role of internalized patriarchy and the lens of feminist maternal theory in understanding his relationship with his own mother (2012), we still have much to discover, learn and theorize about men, mothers and mothering. The purpose of this collection is to explore the meanings and effects of the relationships among men, mothers and mothering from the perspective of sons, men, mothers, and parents across an array of identities, interests, perspectives, and geographical areas. The fruitful intersections of men and care work, masculinities and feminisms, and fatherhood and maternal theory inform our investigation. In her article "Taking Off the Maternal Lens" (2010), Doucet expands upon her earlier theorizing and has "come to believe that studying fathers' caregiving through the lens of men and mothering ultimately limits our understandings of fathers' caring." Although, as Doucet suggests, "fathers are reconfiguring fathering and masculinities and what it means to be a man in the twenty-first century," the stance of this collection affirms there is still substantial insight to be gained from the use of a maternal lens with respect to fathering and masculinities, and to sons, men, mothers, and mothering more generally"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Ebook TUS: Midlands, Main Library Athlone Online eBook (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available

Includes bibliographical references.

Foreward / Andrea Doucet -- Introduction / Gary Lee Pelletier and Fiona Joy Green -- Parental thinking: what does gender have to do with it? / Joanne S. Frye -- Does the manny mother? / Gary Lee Pelletier -- "Is he the son of no one?": a son's relational narrative on his mother / Nick J. Mulé -- Why isn't everyone celebrating me? My mom, bankruptcy, and my ego / Justin Butler -- Lesbian families, sons, and mothering: parenting outside the boundaries / Alys Einion -- Changing the gender script: Ecuadorian son's increased domesticity and emotive response to transnational mothering / Ruth Trinidad Galván -- TV's new dads: sensitive fatherhood and the return of hegemonic masculinity / Dwayne Avery -- What's so funny about childbirth? The projection of patriarchal masculinity in popular comedic childbirth guides / Jeffrey Nall -- Just along for the ride? A father-to-be searching for his role / C. Wesley Buerkle -- Mommie dearest: undoing a gay identity through pregnancy / Jack Hixson-Vulpe -- The ties that bind are broken: trans* breastfeeding practices, ungendering body parts, and unsexing parenting roles / A.J. Lowik -- Becoming mother's nature: a queer son's perspective on mothering in an era of ecological decline / Michael Young.

"Mothers, daughters and mothering have been a longtime focus of research and study in various academic disciplines, and common topics of interest in mainstream press and popular culture, yet the realities and experiences of sons, men, mothers and mothering have been less explored. In her 1980 article "Maternal Thinking" Sara Ruddick theorized, "although some men do, and more men should acquire maternal thinking, their ways of acquisition are necessarily different from ours (women's)". Feminist scholars during the 1990s and early 2000s, such as Audré Lorde (1993), Robin Morgan (1996), Babette Smith (1995), Robyn Rowland and Alison M. Thomas (1996), and those appearing in Andrea O'Reilly's 2001 edited collection Mothers and Sons address the role and struggle of mothers raising sons. And while Andrea Doucet directly explores the question of whether men mother in her book Do Men Mother (2006) and Gary Pelletier reflects on the role of internalized patriarchy and the lens of feminist maternal theory in understanding his relationship with his own mother (2012), we still have much to discover, learn and theorize about men, mothers and mothering. The purpose of this collection is to explore the meanings and effects of the relationships among men, mothers and mothering from the perspective of sons, men, mothers, and parents across an array of identities, interests, perspectives, and geographical areas. The fruitful intersections of men and care work, masculinities and feminisms, and fatherhood and maternal theory inform our investigation. In her article "Taking Off the Maternal Lens" (2010), Doucet expands upon her earlier theorizing and has "come to believe that studying fathers' caregiving through the lens of men and mothering ultimately limits our understandings of fathers' caring." Although, as Doucet suggests, "fathers are reconfiguring fathering and masculinities and what it means to be a man in the twenty-first century," the stance of this collection affirms there is still substantial insight to be gained from the use of a maternal lens with respect to fathering and masculinities, and to sons, men, mothers, and mothering more generally"-- Provided by publisher.

Description based on print version record.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.

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