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Marginalized Mothers, Mothering from the Margins
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This volume examines the barriers and borders that marginalize mothers and their efforts to be good mothers and how they mother as a form of resistance to these barriers and borders.
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08 October 2018

This volume focuses on the ways in which mothers are
marginalized based on intersecting identities, such as immigration status,
race, class, disability, sexuality, and how these women mother from the margins.
Divided into three sections, this collection brings forth the voices and
experiences of mothers and highlights the institutions and laws that
marginalize them. In the first section, mothers
face barriers such as institutional constraints that block them from needed
resources and the ability to mother as they see fit. In section two, contributors examine the
borders of marginalized mothering - boundaries reflected through citizenship,
walls, geography, dealings with intimate partners and welfare offices, or prison
bars. Readings in this section highlight mothers’ efforts to transcend, resist,
or even just survive experiences with borders.
The final section centers on mothers that explicitly adopt mothering
strategies of resistance or explicitly use their status as mothers in their
activism. Topics range from mothers who engage in milk sharing to mothers of
color whom organize against police brutality.
Throughout the volume, contributors demonstrate the striking resilience
of these mothers, and their resistance in challenging the ideologies and
institutions that marginalize them.
Price: $145.99
Pages: 304
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Series: Advances in Gender Research
Publication Date:
08 October 2018
ISBN: 9781787564008
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / Motherhood, Gender studies: women & girls, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory
This volume brings together 16 essays by sociology and other scholars from the US, the UK, and South Africa, who discuss the barriers, struggles, resilience, and resistance of mothers marginalized for various reasons, from incarceration to immigration, and how their identities, such as immigration status, race, class, disability, sexuality, and age, impact expectations, treatment, and choices. They address the barriers that these mothers face, including with welfare, surveillance and policing, and in achieving their aspirations, as well as by mothers of children with disabilities; the borders of marginalized mothering, with discussion of Chinese mothers who give birth in the US, Mexican-immigrant mothers in the US, migrant mothers, incarcerated mothers, and migrant nannies; and mothering as resistance, in terms of maternal support, care work strategies used when they have met their lifetime limits on welfare, black women's home schooling experiences, breast milk sharing, and black activist mothering against police brutality.
Tiffany Taylor is Associate Professor of Sociology at Kent
State University at Kent, USA. In her research, she examines a number of topics
related to inequality and work, including policy implementation of programs for
impoverished mothers in North Carolina and Ohio.
Katrina Bloch
is Associate Professor of Sociology at Kent State University at Stark, USA. She
is an inequality scholar and co-editor (with Carissa Froyum and Tiffany Taylor)
of Creating and Contesting Social Inequalities.
Introduction
Bringing Marginalized Mothers to the Center; Tiffany Taylor and Katrina Bloch
Part 1: Barriers that Marginalize Mothers
1. Pride and Hope, Shame and Blame: How Welfare Mothers in Higher Education Juggle Competing Identities; Sheila M. Katz
2. Watching What I'm Doing, Watching How I'm doing It': Exploring the Everyday Experiences of Surveillance and Silenced Voices Among Marginalised Mothers in Welsh Low-Income Locales; Dawn Mannay, Jordon Creaghan, Dunla Gallagher, Sherelle Mason, Melanie Morgan, and Aimee Grant
3. Mothering, Identity Construction and Visions of the Future Among Low-Income Adolescent Mothers from São Paulo, Brazil; Alanna E.F. Rudzik
4. Socio-Economic (Im) Mobility Among Low-Income Mothers of Children with Disabilities; Regina S. Baker and Linda Burton
5. The Parental Experience of Mothers with Children Who Have Developmental Disabilities: Qualitative Reflections On Marginalization and Resiliency; Kaitlin Stober and Alexis Franzese
Part 2: Borders that Marginalize Mothers
6. Chinese Maternity Tourists and Their "Anchor Babies"? Online Commenters' Disdain and Racialized Conditional Acceptance of Non-Citizen Reproduction; Cassaundra Rodriguez
7. "Doing" and "Undoing" Gender to Make Ends Meet: Understanding the Agency of Poor Minority Mothers who Negotiate Gender and Survival at the Intersection of Migration, Intimate Unions and the Welfare Office; Sancha Medwinter and Linda M. Burton
8. "I'm Not a Good Mother Now, But I Will be in the Future:" Sub-Saharan African Transnational Mothers in a Transit Migrant Country; Cynthia Magallanes-Gonzalez
9. Mothering from a Distance -- The Experience of Domestic Workers in Durban, South Africa; Boitumelo Seepamore
10. Disrupted Identities: Narratives of Mothers in Prison; Kelly Lockwood
Part 3: Mothering as Resistance to Marginalization
11. "Parenting Like a White Person": Race and Material Support among Marginalized Mothers; Cheryl Crane and Karen Christopher
12. Carework Strategies and Everyday Resistance among Mothers who are Timed-Out of Welfare; Jill Weigt
13. Exploring Black Women’s Homeschooling Experiences at the Intersections of Race, Gender, and Class; Taura Taylor
14. Breast Milk Sharing at the Intersections of Race and Risk; Kristin J Wilson
15. "We Must Summon the Courage": Black Motherhood as Motivation to Resist Police Brutality; Anna Chatillon and Beth E. Schneider
Afterword:
Nancy Naples