This article extends sociological and feminist accounts of housework by examining the social significance of the rise of the ‘cleanfluencer’: online influencers who supply household cleaning and organization tips and modes of lifestyle aspiration via social media. We focus on ‘Mrs Hinch’; aka Sophie Hinchliffe from Essex, the ‘homegrown’ Instagram star with 4.1 million followers who shares daily images and stories of cleaning and family life, and has a series of bestselling books, regular daytime TV appearances and supermarket tie-ins. We argue that, within neoliberal culture, housework is now often refashioned as a form of therapy for women’s stressful lives: stresses that neoliberalism and patriarchy have both generated and compounded. Th...
This article analyzes the construction in the UK media of the ‘stay-at-home mother’, a maternal figu...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...
This article analyses the emergence of the new social type of the ‘yummy mummy’ by examining the con...
This article extends sociological and feminist accounts of housework by examining the social signifi...
Based on a thematic analysis of 7,569 posts on the online parenting forum Mumsnet Talk, in this arti...
Drawing on a digital ethnography of #zerowaste Instagram influencers, this paper explores the inters...
This article focuses on the significance of the plethora of representations of mothers ‘behaving bad...
© 2019 The Author(s) .The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Feminist Rev...
This paper draws on and extends the author’s earlier work on the history of the Daily Mail Ideal Hom...
This article discusses the growing UK trend of people working for themselves. Beginning with the exa...
Personal blogging and social media feeds are at the forefront of a renewed interest in do it yoursel...
This article is concerned with the capacity of contemporary fiction to reveal and oppose the ubiquit...
Women’s lives have been affected exponentially by the COVID_19 pandemic. In this paper, we explore s...
This paper argues that ‘beauty apps’ are transforming the arena of appearance politics and foregroun...
Domestic work is one cause for concern for feminist theorists and migration experts. Research indica...
This article analyzes the construction in the UK media of the ‘stay-at-home mother’, a maternal figu...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...
This article analyses the emergence of the new social type of the ‘yummy mummy’ by examining the con...
This article extends sociological and feminist accounts of housework by examining the social signifi...
Based on a thematic analysis of 7,569 posts on the online parenting forum Mumsnet Talk, in this arti...
Drawing on a digital ethnography of #zerowaste Instagram influencers, this paper explores the inters...
This article focuses on the significance of the plethora of representations of mothers ‘behaving bad...
© 2019 The Author(s) .The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Feminist Rev...
This paper draws on and extends the author’s earlier work on the history of the Daily Mail Ideal Hom...
This article discusses the growing UK trend of people working for themselves. Beginning with the exa...
Personal blogging and social media feeds are at the forefront of a renewed interest in do it yoursel...
This article is concerned with the capacity of contemporary fiction to reveal and oppose the ubiquit...
Women’s lives have been affected exponentially by the COVID_19 pandemic. In this paper, we explore s...
This paper argues that ‘beauty apps’ are transforming the arena of appearance politics and foregroun...
Domestic work is one cause for concern for feminist theorists and migration experts. Research indica...
This article analyzes the construction in the UK media of the ‘stay-at-home mother’, a maternal figu...
This article juxtaposes mediated representations of stay-at-home mothers (SAHMs) with accounts of tw...
This article analyses the emergence of the new social type of the ‘yummy mummy’ by examining the con...