This paper focuses on young low-income mothers’ engagement with, and management of, potentially conflicting discourses within the context of maternal foodwork. Findings from qualitative, longitudinal interviews with 13 UK women illustrate the performance of identity and family work, in relation to infant feeding and wider maternal practices. Each participant was interviewed twice, once prior to, and then following, the birth of their first baby. We identify three rhetorical strategies. Adopting and resisting allow for the acceptance or rejection of prominent infant feeding discourses. Under reframing, young women transform the encouragement to breastfeed, subverting or reversing official discourses. Reframing thus provides an alternative me...
The way mothers feed their babies is, internationally, the subject of research, health policy initia...
Despite experiencing numerous barriers, mothers today confront increasing social pressure to embody ...
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits to both mother and child. The average rate of bre...
Background: In the UK, mothers under 20 are the group least likely to breastfeed. Recent public heal...
Breastfeeding has a range of benefits for mother and baby, however, breastfeeding rates in Wales, UK...
Breastfeeding is not simply a technical or practical task but is part of the transition to motherhoo...
This research investigates how women in the UK experience and navigate infant feeding policies which...
This chapter examines the ways in which policy agendas and contemporary notions of the ‘good mother’...
Socio-cultural studies have suggested that, even in societies where it is a commonplace practice, in...
This article examines the narratives of women who breastfeed their children for ‘extended’ periods o...
A large percentage of British women, in common with women in other Western countries, feed their you...
In England 78% of mothers initiate breastfeeding and in the UK less than 1% exclusively breastfeed u...
The promotion of breastfeeding is an important focus of intervention for professionals working to im...
The promotion of breastfeeding is an important focus of intervention for professionals working to im...
Breastfeding does not only take place in women’s bodies but it helps construct the notion of ‘good ’...
The way mothers feed their babies is, internationally, the subject of research, health policy initia...
Despite experiencing numerous barriers, mothers today confront increasing social pressure to embody ...
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits to both mother and child. The average rate of bre...
Background: In the UK, mothers under 20 are the group least likely to breastfeed. Recent public heal...
Breastfeeding has a range of benefits for mother and baby, however, breastfeeding rates in Wales, UK...
Breastfeeding is not simply a technical or practical task but is part of the transition to motherhoo...
This research investigates how women in the UK experience and navigate infant feeding policies which...
This chapter examines the ways in which policy agendas and contemporary notions of the ‘good mother’...
Socio-cultural studies have suggested that, even in societies where it is a commonplace practice, in...
This article examines the narratives of women who breastfeed their children for ‘extended’ periods o...
A large percentage of British women, in common with women in other Western countries, feed their you...
In England 78% of mothers initiate breastfeeding and in the UK less than 1% exclusively breastfeed u...
The promotion of breastfeeding is an important focus of intervention for professionals working to im...
The promotion of breastfeeding is an important focus of intervention for professionals working to im...
Breastfeding does not only take place in women’s bodies but it helps construct the notion of ‘good ’...
The way mothers feed their babies is, internationally, the subject of research, health policy initia...
Despite experiencing numerous barriers, mothers today confront increasing social pressure to embody ...
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits to both mother and child. The average rate of bre...