Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to compare public health discourses on the importance of motherhood with organizational attitudes towards childbearing. It shows how pregnancy and the nurturing of infant children are valorized within public health discourses, which treat pregnancy and new maternity as a miraculous “project”, encouraging mothers to position maternity as central to their lives. By contrast, the paper shows how employers treat pregnancy and new motherhood as inconvenient and messy: as monstrous, at work. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws upon a database of qualitative netnographic (or internet-based) research. It analyses netnographic interactions between pregnant and newly maternal women. These virtual data ...
[[abstract]]Being pregnant is one of the essential ways for women to become mothers. Through the pro...
Through scientific discourse and reproductive technologies, the reproductive body and the maternal b...
This presentation compares and contrasts women\u27s reported desires for childbirth against the type...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to compare public health discourses on the importance of mo...
This paper contributes to research on women's health by challenging the 'common belief' that pregnan...
textIn this dissertation, I argue that the maternal body is a chief site of discursive political and...
This paper contributes new perspectives to studies on women in management, proposing the concept of ...
AbstractThis paper explores how pregnancy discrimination at work is perceived by both employers and ...
This paper contributes to research on women’s health by challenging the ‘common belief’ that pregnan...
This paper inquiries into the aesthetic experiences of childbirth; a "fleshy becoming" that disru...
Over the last 30 years or so, feminists have developed a strong and influential critique of the medi...
This article argues that a particular metaphysical model permeates cultural practices surrounding pr...
This article builds on the theorizing of body work through introducing a new concept: ‘maternal body...
This paper contributes to debates on the intersections between organizations, the body, and reproduc...
In public discourses, midwifery care figures as a marginalized profession standing in opposition to ...
[[abstract]]Being pregnant is one of the essential ways for women to become mothers. Through the pro...
Through scientific discourse and reproductive technologies, the reproductive body and the maternal b...
This presentation compares and contrasts women\u27s reported desires for childbirth against the type...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to compare public health discourses on the importance of mo...
This paper contributes to research on women's health by challenging the 'common belief' that pregnan...
textIn this dissertation, I argue that the maternal body is a chief site of discursive political and...
This paper contributes new perspectives to studies on women in management, proposing the concept of ...
AbstractThis paper explores how pregnancy discrimination at work is perceived by both employers and ...
This paper contributes to research on women’s health by challenging the ‘common belief’ that pregnan...
This paper inquiries into the aesthetic experiences of childbirth; a "fleshy becoming" that disru...
Over the last 30 years or so, feminists have developed a strong and influential critique of the medi...
This article argues that a particular metaphysical model permeates cultural practices surrounding pr...
This article builds on the theorizing of body work through introducing a new concept: ‘maternal body...
This paper contributes to debates on the intersections between organizations, the body, and reproduc...
In public discourses, midwifery care figures as a marginalized profession standing in opposition to ...
[[abstract]]Being pregnant is one of the essential ways for women to become mothers. Through the pro...
Through scientific discourse and reproductive technologies, the reproductive body and the maternal b...
This presentation compares and contrasts women\u27s reported desires for childbirth against the type...