This article examines the ways in which men and women remember men’s place in, and experiences of, family life in postwar England during a period when a new ideal of fatherhood arguably emerged. Based on forty-four oral history testimonies with men and women, this article adds a new dimension to existing literature in gender history by closely examining men and women’s perspectives on the same issues. Focusing on decisions around family planning, experiences of pregnancy and birth, and the division of labour in the home, the article analyses how men and women understood their respective roles as parents-to-be and as new parents; how they negotiated the expectations of those around them; and the extent to which the gendering of childcare res...
This project explores the question of women\u27s expectations and experience across the transition t...
This study focuses on the lived experiences of 25 professionally employed UK fathers who are first-w...
Despite the continuing interest in the history of masculinity, fatherhood has been surprisingly negl...
Fathers are often neglected in histories of family life in Britain. Family Men provides the first ac...
This paper explores the qualitative perspectives of women about a community embedded fathers’ initia...
This editorial article introduces the seven contributions to the special issue “Fathers and Forefath...
BACKGROUND The improved economic position of women over the last few decades is likely to have alter...
Since the 1940s, men’s presence at childbirth has changed from being out of the question to not only...
This article explores men’s articulations and practices of gender through transition to first-time f...
Increasingly in international research and popular media a growing interest in men and fatherhood is...
This article explores how working fathers are conceptualised within the UK’s work-family law and pol...
Why did women’s roles change so dramatically in the West in the period after 1945? These years saw m...
This article argues that fatherhood was invested with a greater significance in mid-twentieth-centur...
peer-reviewedThis article describes the formation of a family rights project in Limerick. It explai...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record...
This project explores the question of women\u27s expectations and experience across the transition t...
This study focuses on the lived experiences of 25 professionally employed UK fathers who are first-w...
Despite the continuing interest in the history of masculinity, fatherhood has been surprisingly negl...
Fathers are often neglected in histories of family life in Britain. Family Men provides the first ac...
This paper explores the qualitative perspectives of women about a community embedded fathers’ initia...
This editorial article introduces the seven contributions to the special issue “Fathers and Forefath...
BACKGROUND The improved economic position of women over the last few decades is likely to have alter...
Since the 1940s, men’s presence at childbirth has changed from being out of the question to not only...
This article explores men’s articulations and practices of gender through transition to first-time f...
Increasingly in international research and popular media a growing interest in men and fatherhood is...
This article explores how working fathers are conceptualised within the UK’s work-family law and pol...
Why did women’s roles change so dramatically in the West in the period after 1945? These years saw m...
This article argues that fatherhood was invested with a greater significance in mid-twentieth-centur...
peer-reviewedThis article describes the formation of a family rights project in Limerick. It explai...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record...
This project explores the question of women\u27s expectations and experience across the transition t...
This study focuses on the lived experiences of 25 professionally employed UK fathers who are first-w...
Despite the continuing interest in the history of masculinity, fatherhood has been surprisingly negl...