This thesis examines contemporary popular and news media representation of motherhood and labour in Canada and the United States. I explore what texts about motherhood and maternal labour suggest about gendered responsibilities to citizenship in neoliberal conditions. Building on important feminist research in the fields of citizenship, care, and the welfare state, I ask how are mothers being socially responsibilized toward multiple forms of labour simultaneously and to what effect? By engaging feminist theories of citizenship and bridging this field with feminist theories of science, media, and affect, I demonstrate how, under neoliberal conditions and in precarious circumstances, the ways in which women appear to juggle their commitments ...
This thesis examines how labour associated with the reproductive sphere—labour historically consigne...
“Can women/mothers have it all?” is the opening question of Anne Marie Slaughter’s controversial art...
Through an analysis of policy texts, population statistics and a targeted sample from the popular pr...
textIn this dissertation, I argue that the maternal body is a chief site of discursive political and...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines how Canadian women have campaigned for...
Mothers who work and identify as feminists have been thrust into a new ”COVID-19 normal,” finding th...
Mothers who work and identify as feminists have been thrust into a new ”COVID‐19 normal,” finding th...
This essay examines the question of conflict between market work and family care from the angle of f...
There are conflicts between waged labour and motherhood that make it difficult for women to seize in...
The article focuses on maternity in the new bio-politics of the family. The work "The Anti-Social Fa...
This dissertation will explore the intersections between race and gender in the US welfare system. F...
Under neoliberal capitalist globalization, women's poverty and the deepening of women’s oppress...
In this article, a comparative analysis is presented of two ethnographic case studies on mothering p...
This thesis investigates how the processes and practices of reproduction have been transformed not o...
Social media provides a particularly unique medium in which modern, neoliberal discourses of motherh...
This thesis examines how labour associated with the reproductive sphere—labour historically consigne...
“Can women/mothers have it all?” is the opening question of Anne Marie Slaughter’s controversial art...
Through an analysis of policy texts, population statistics and a targeted sample from the popular pr...
textIn this dissertation, I argue that the maternal body is a chief site of discursive political and...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines how Canadian women have campaigned for...
Mothers who work and identify as feminists have been thrust into a new ”COVID-19 normal,” finding th...
Mothers who work and identify as feminists have been thrust into a new ”COVID‐19 normal,” finding th...
This essay examines the question of conflict between market work and family care from the angle of f...
There are conflicts between waged labour and motherhood that make it difficult for women to seize in...
The article focuses on maternity in the new bio-politics of the family. The work "The Anti-Social Fa...
This dissertation will explore the intersections between race and gender in the US welfare system. F...
Under neoliberal capitalist globalization, women's poverty and the deepening of women’s oppress...
In this article, a comparative analysis is presented of two ethnographic case studies on mothering p...
This thesis investigates how the processes and practices of reproduction have been transformed not o...
Social media provides a particularly unique medium in which modern, neoliberal discourses of motherh...
This thesis examines how labour associated with the reproductive sphere—labour historically consigne...
“Can women/mothers have it all?” is the opening question of Anne Marie Slaughter’s controversial art...
Through an analysis of policy texts, population statistics and a targeted sample from the popular pr...