Making Sense of Motherhood
Becoming a mother changes lives in many ways and this original and accessible 2005 book explores how women try to make sense of, and narrate their experiences of first-time motherhood in the Western world. Tina Miller pays close attention to women's own accounts, over time, of their experiences of transition to motherhood and shows how myths of motherhood continue because women do not feel able to voice their early (often difficult) experiences of mothering. The book charts the social, cultural and moral contours of contemporary motherhood and engages with sociological and feminist debates on how selves are constituted, maintained and narrated. Drawing on original research and narrative theory, the book also explores the disjuncture that often exists between personal experience and public discourse and the cultural dimensions of expert knowledge.
- Pays close attention to women's own accounts over time of their experiences of transition to motherhood, using a narrative approach
- Contributes to debates on reflexivity and gender - and the obdurate myths of motherhood
- Shows how cultural scripts shape expectations and experience in the West and the developing world, in relation to mothering and motherhood
Product details
February 2005Paperback
9780521543644
188 pages
228 × 152 × 16 mm
0.296kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1. The storied human life: a narrative approach
- 2. Making sense of motherhood: cultural scripts
- 3. Setting the Western context: mothering in late-modern society
- 4. Anticipating motherhood: the antenatal period
- 5. Making sense of early mothering experiences
- 6. A return to normal: becoming the expert
- 7. Conclusions and reflections: making sense of motherhood
- References
- Index.