Based on a thematic analysis of 7,569 posts on the online parenting forum Mumsnet Talk, in this article we examine how domestic cleaning—one of the most invisible aspects of reproductive labour—and the people who perform it are made visible. We conceptualize Mumsnet discussions as a “visibility sensor:” a technological and affective space that captures, analyses and relays information and feelings in ways that contribute to visibilizing cleaning labour and sensitizing its users to recognize the women they employ to clean their homes. At the same time, our analysis highlights the limitations of this sensor: how the visibility Mumsnet discussions afford to cleaning and cleaners tends to reinscribe its meanings within a gendered and individual...
In the last 10 years, mum/mom/mommy blogging has become a global phenomenon, with mothers from China...
Whilst not denying the continued power of hegemonic ideologies of mothering, it has been suggested t...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...
Based on a thematic analysis of 7,569 posts on the online parenting forum Mumsnet Talk, in this arti...
This article uses a feminist poststructuralist approach to explore how contributors to a single thre...
This book investigates the growing politicization of Mumsnet and its use by politicians to influence...
Digital technologies have opened up new environments in which the experiences of motherhood and moth...
This article explores the discourses and related subject positions that are negotiated by contributo...
Posting about one’s children and family has become a routine practice for mothers on social media. T...
Language, Gender and Parenthood Online explores the digital interactions of parents on the UK-based ...
This article examines the troubling of gender norms that unfolded on the social networking site, Mum...
This Viewpoint positions the contemporary UK parenting website Mumsnet within the wider history of m...
This article extends sociological and feminist accounts of housework by examining the social signifi...
Social media provides a particularly unique medium in which modern, neoliberal discourses of motherh...
This paper explores the ways in which mothers and daughters in marginalised, urban housing areas in ...
In the last 10 years, mum/mom/mommy blogging has become a global phenomenon, with mothers from China...
Whilst not denying the continued power of hegemonic ideologies of mothering, it has been suggested t...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...
Based on a thematic analysis of 7,569 posts on the online parenting forum Mumsnet Talk, in this arti...
This article uses a feminist poststructuralist approach to explore how contributors to a single thre...
This book investigates the growing politicization of Mumsnet and its use by politicians to influence...
Digital technologies have opened up new environments in which the experiences of motherhood and moth...
This article explores the discourses and related subject positions that are negotiated by contributo...
Posting about one’s children and family has become a routine practice for mothers on social media. T...
Language, Gender and Parenthood Online explores the digital interactions of parents on the UK-based ...
This article examines the troubling of gender norms that unfolded on the social networking site, Mum...
This Viewpoint positions the contemporary UK parenting website Mumsnet within the wider history of m...
This article extends sociological and feminist accounts of housework by examining the social signifi...
Social media provides a particularly unique medium in which modern, neoliberal discourses of motherh...
This paper explores the ways in which mothers and daughters in marginalised, urban housing areas in ...
In the last 10 years, mum/mom/mommy blogging has become a global phenomenon, with mothers from China...
Whilst not denying the continued power of hegemonic ideologies of mothering, it has been suggested t...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...