Making Sense of Parenthood: Caring, Gender and Family Lives
Cambridge University Press, 8/31/2017
EAN 9781107504288, ISBN10: 1107504287
Paperback, 196 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.1 cm
Language: English
Following on from Making Sense of Motherhood (2005) and Making Sense of Fatherhood (2010), Tina Miller's book focuses on transitions to first-time parenthood and the unfolding experiences of managing caring and paid work in modern family lives. Returning to her original participants, it collects later episodes of their experience of 'doing' family life, and meticulously examines mothers' and fathers' accounts of negotiating intensified parenting responsibilities and work-place demands. It explores questions of why gender equality and equity are harder to manage within the home sphere when organising caring and associated responsibilities, re-addressing the concept of 'maternal gatekeeping' and offering insights into a new concept of 'paternal gatekeeping'. The findings presented will inform both scholarly work and policy on family lives, gender equality and work.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Parenthoods
setting the contemporary context
2. Caring landscapes and gendered practices
3. Fathering, caring and work
parenting school aged children
4. Mothering
caring, work and teenage children
5. Parenting separately?
post-separation experiences
6. Unfolding relationships
taking a longer view of moral orientations, mental work and gender in family care and work
7. Conclusions and reflections
References.