This special issue of Women: A Cultural Review explores the diversity of maternal images proffered by various media formats, including cinema, literature and visual art, in the twenty-first century. The editors begin their introduction with an overview of recent research on maternal representation, then introduce the primary thematic concerns that feature in the included articles. They look at how mothers whose mothering experiences do not reflect conventional family models—particularly single mothers, LGBQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer/questioning) mothers and migrant mothers —have been either sidelined by or misrepresented in cultural and media depictions of motherhood, and how these depictions have begun to evolve in recent year...
The caring mother is one of the most recurring images of femininity in post-war advertising. We exam...
Commercialisation and commodification have transformed the meaning and experience of mothering in th...
Women in the U.S. and Canada pay a substantial social and economic penalty for becoming mothers. And...
This special issue of Women: A Cultural Review explores the diversity of maternal images proffered ...
In our modern western culture, there are two drastically different views of motherhood. Society ofte...
This volume is the firstborn of the Annals of Cultural Psychology-- a yearly edited book series in t...
This edited collection explores various modes and forms of art practice which look at mothers as sub...
This anthology, the first on the 21st century motherhood movement,includes seven sections: Becoming...
It has been four decades since the publication of Adrienne Rich’s Of Woman Born but her analysis of ...
This article discusses two photographic artworks that challenge popular narratives of failed or achi...
This is a review article of five volumes on representations of the mother in French, French-Canadian...
Mothering and motherhood are among two key components of the construction of femininity. This study ...
This article examines how lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer (LGBQ) women negotiate mother-identity na...
This article seeks to introduce the contemporary maternal experience and the ‘good’ mother myth as i...
for the Future In the collision of reality with mythology, it is the mythology that tends to prevail...
The caring mother is one of the most recurring images of femininity in post-war advertising. We exam...
Commercialisation and commodification have transformed the meaning and experience of mothering in th...
Women in the U.S. and Canada pay a substantial social and economic penalty for becoming mothers. And...
This special issue of Women: A Cultural Review explores the diversity of maternal images proffered ...
In our modern western culture, there are two drastically different views of motherhood. Society ofte...
This volume is the firstborn of the Annals of Cultural Psychology-- a yearly edited book series in t...
This edited collection explores various modes and forms of art practice which look at mothers as sub...
This anthology, the first on the 21st century motherhood movement,includes seven sections: Becoming...
It has been four decades since the publication of Adrienne Rich’s Of Woman Born but her analysis of ...
This article discusses two photographic artworks that challenge popular narratives of failed or achi...
This is a review article of five volumes on representations of the mother in French, French-Canadian...
Mothering and motherhood are among two key components of the construction of femininity. This study ...
This article examines how lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer (LGBQ) women negotiate mother-identity na...
This article seeks to introduce the contemporary maternal experience and the ‘good’ mother myth as i...
for the Future In the collision of reality with mythology, it is the mythology that tends to prevail...
The caring mother is one of the most recurring images of femininity in post-war advertising. We exam...
Commercialisation and commodification have transformed the meaning and experience of mothering in th...
Women in the U.S. and Canada pay a substantial social and economic penalty for becoming mothers. And...