This article explores the experiences of ten educated middle-class Singaporean women who act in contrast to the state’s neoliberal focus on continuous employment, opting-out of full-time professional work to intensively parent their children. Using the theoretical lens of intensive motherhood and a qualitative longitudinal approach, we explore how these women legitimise their position, highlighting a culturally specific performance of motherhood (‘Professional Motherhood’). Professional motherhood enrols elements of former professional identities and skillsets into everyday motherhood, performed through three strategies: positioning, productive and practicing motherhood. We contribute to existing literature by demonstrating that culturally ...
This study theorizes why full-time working women with partners and school-age children deploy talk o...
Parenthood is universally extolled to be a desirable and normative social role. However, the prolife...
This article explores the lived experiences of first-generation Chinese and South Korean mothers liv...
This ethnographic study explores how Singaporean middle-class women who have opted out of the tradit...
The involvement of mothers of younger children in the labour market is a new phenomenon for Singapor...
With an increasing number of graduate mothers in Singapore, greater emphasis is placed on the dual r...
This study analyses the daily negotiation processes of working and mothering roles performed by wor...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiat...
Twenty-four years had passed since Arlie Hochschild and Anne Machung published their book, “The Seco...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiate...
Motherhood in India has been understood primarily by placing mothers in the domestic space. A mother...
This paper explores intensive motherhood and educational desires in contemporary Singapore. Singapor...
Singapore’s economic development has been progressing rapidly over the past few decades. The level ...
Women’s reproductive rights have always been a site of contestation. The central question this paper...
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and ...
This study theorizes why full-time working women with partners and school-age children deploy talk o...
Parenthood is universally extolled to be a desirable and normative social role. However, the prolife...
This article explores the lived experiences of first-generation Chinese and South Korean mothers liv...
This ethnographic study explores how Singaporean middle-class women who have opted out of the tradit...
The involvement of mothers of younger children in the labour market is a new phenomenon for Singapor...
With an increasing number of graduate mothers in Singapore, greater emphasis is placed on the dual r...
This study analyses the daily negotiation processes of working and mothering roles performed by wor...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiat...
Twenty-four years had passed since Arlie Hochschild and Anne Machung published their book, “The Seco...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiate...
Motherhood in India has been understood primarily by placing mothers in the domestic space. A mother...
This paper explores intensive motherhood and educational desires in contemporary Singapore. Singapor...
Singapore’s economic development has been progressing rapidly over the past few decades. The level ...
Women’s reproductive rights have always been a site of contestation. The central question this paper...
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and ...
This study theorizes why full-time working women with partners and school-age children deploy talk o...
Parenthood is universally extolled to be a desirable and normative social role. However, the prolife...
This article explores the lived experiences of first-generation Chinese and South Korean mothers liv...