Manufacturing motherhood : The shadow work of nannies and au pairs
This paper explores how working mothers and paid child care providers interpret the division of mothering labor in the context of in-home care. The nannies, au pairs, and working mothers interviewed for this study make sense of their shared "mother-work" in the context of a dominant belief...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Qualitative sociology 1998-04, Vol.21 (1), p.25-53 |
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description | This paper explores how working mothers and paid child care providers interpret the division of mothering labor in the context of in-home care. The nannies, au pairs, and working mothers interviewed for this study make sense of their shared "mother-work" in the context of a dominant belief system that values "intensive mothering." Consequently, in addition to negotiating the allocation of mothering tasks, they must also negotiate the meanings assigned to these tasks: specifically, they manufacture an image of shared mothering that contradicts their day-to-day practice. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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source | SpringerNature Journals; Sociological Abstracts |
subjects | Child Care Services Childrearing Practices Domestics General studies Manufacturing Social Determination of Meaning Sociology Sociology of the family. Age groups |
title | Manufacturing motherhood : The shadow work of nannies and au pairs |
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