Price: $39.95
Page Count: 280
Publication Date: July 2021
ISBN: 978-1-77258-287-1
"This book highlights diverse perspectives on motherhood, mothering, and masculinities; it fills a gap in the literature as it takes up different masculinities and their relationships to mothers and motherhood. The essays in this volume provide a fascinating look into the many ways that masculinities and motherhood intersect in different social, political, and national contexts."
- Lisa M. Anderson, Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies, School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
PART 1 CULTURAL NARRATIVES
1
Motherhood and the Construction of a Regional Hegemonic Masculinity
in Southwestern Nigeria
Tolá Olú Pearce
2
Exploring Perspectives on Black Motherhood, Parenting, and Child Rearing through Black Social Media Users’ Meme Circulation
Kierra Otis
3
Feminist Critique of the Representation of Motherhood and
Masculinity in Bollywood Cinema: Implications of Gender Violence
in the Indian Diaspora
Meghna Bhat
4
How the Principles of Matristic Societies Can Provide More Flexibility on Mothering, Motherhood, and Masculinities
Katharine I. Ransom
PART 11 ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
5
Healing Foundational Wounds in Sons and Mothers: From Womb Envy to Asymmetrical Generativity
Cheryl Lynch-Lawler
6
Achieving Womanhood through Motherhood?
A Phenomenology of the Experience of Mothering for the Hijras in India
Stuti Das
7
Guerrilla Mothering: On Masculinities and Femininities
Victoria Team
8
Empowered Through Mothering:
Armenian Women’s Agency in Trauma and War in Karabakh
Sevan Beukian
PART 111 POSTCOLONIAL DEVELOPMENTS
9
Kokum-Gikendaasowin: Grandmother Knowledge,
Epistemology and (Re)Generation of Anishinaabeg Malehoods
Renée E. Mzinegiizhigoo-Kwe Bédard
10
Masculinity and Motherhood: Engendering Indian Nationalism
Zairunisha
11
“A Husband is the Firstborn Child”: Networks, Masculinities and Motherhood in Tanzania.
Rasel Madaha
12
‘More than a Woman’: Exploring Motherhood and Masculinities in Food
and Nutrition Security in Northern Vietnam
Andrea Moraes
About the Contributors
Tola Olu Pearce (PhD. Brown University) is a sociologist and Professor Emerita at the University of Missouri, Columbia, USA. She also taught sociology at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria for 15 years. Research, teaching and publication interests are: women and children’s health in Africa, globalisation, social inequalities and Human Rights.
Andrea Moraes (PhD. University of Missouri, Columbia) is a Brazilian/Canadian scholar in rural sociology. She is interested in indigenous populations, food security and rural development. Presently, she is a Lecturer at the School of Nutrition and the Chang School of Continuing Studies at Ryerson University Toronto in Canada.