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Mothering while black boundaries and burdens of middle-class parenthood Dawn Marie Dow.

By: Dow, Dawn MarieMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Oakland, California University of California Press, [2019]Copyright date: ©2019Description: 1 online resourceISBN: 0520971779; 9780520971776Subject(s): African American mothers -- Social conditions | Parenting -- Social aspects | Middle class African Americans -- Family relationships | Intersectionality (Sociology) | Intersectionality (Sociology) | Parenting -- Social aspects | POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Cultural Policy | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social ClassesGenre/Form: EBSCO eBooks Additional physical formats: Print version:: Mothering while blackDDC classification: 306.874/30896073 LOC classification: HQ759Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction : not part of that white mother society -- Creating racial safety and comfort -- Border crossers : understanding struggle -- Border policers : finding our kind of people -- Border transcenders : challenging traditional notions of racial authenticity -- The market-family matrix : the social construction of integrated and conflicted frameworks of work/life balance -- Racial histories of family and work : paid employment is a mother's duty -- Alternative configuration of childrearing : supporting mothers' public sphere activities through extended family parenting -- Conclusion and implications : navigating race, class, and gender in motherhood, parenting and work.
Summary: "Informed by news stories, such as those of the fatal shootings of Oscar Grant and Trayvon Martin, and engaged with ongoing popular and academic discussions of work and family conflict, Mothering While Black makes significant contributions to the sociology of work and family, race and ethnicity, and gender and culture. Using the analytical lens of intersectionality, it demonstrates that the frameworks typically deployed in research on middle-class mothers and their families, which usually focus on the experiences of elite white mothers, do not adequately capture the experiences of African American middle-class and upper-middle-class mothers. Through sixty in-depth semistructured interviews with African American middle-class and upper-middle-class women, Mothering While Black distills the experiences of these contemporary mothers, revealing the cultural expectations and constraints that inform their approaches to parenting, work and family, and childcare. Through their accounts, this book demonstrates how race, class, and gender complicate their parenting concerns and strategies, and identifies three aspects of African American middle-class identity that study participants worked to foster in their children. Through this research, the book expands on and revises theories related to parenting, racial identity formation, and family and work conflict by complicating existing frameworks for understanding the cultural pushes and pulls that influence mothers' decision-making"--Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction : not part of that white mother society -- Creating racial safety and comfort -- Border crossers : understanding struggle -- Border policers : finding our kind of people -- Border transcenders : challenging traditional notions of racial authenticity -- The market-family matrix : the social construction of integrated and conflicted frameworks of work/life balance -- Racial histories of family and work : paid employment is a mother's duty -- Alternative configuration of childrearing : supporting mothers' public sphere activities through extended family parenting -- Conclusion and implications : navigating race, class, and gender in motherhood, parenting and work.

"Informed by news stories, such as those of the fatal shootings of Oscar Grant and Trayvon Martin, and engaged with ongoing popular and academic discussions of work and family conflict, Mothering While Black makes significant contributions to the sociology of work and family, race and ethnicity, and gender and culture. Using the analytical lens of intersectionality, it demonstrates that the frameworks typically deployed in research on middle-class mothers and their families, which usually focus on the experiences of elite white mothers, do not adequately capture the experiences of African American middle-class and upper-middle-class mothers. Through sixty in-depth semistructured interviews with African American middle-class and upper-middle-class women, Mothering While Black distills the experiences of these contemporary mothers, revealing the cultural expectations and constraints that inform their approaches to parenting, work and family, and childcare. Through their accounts, this book demonstrates how race, class, and gender complicate their parenting concerns and strategies, and identifies three aspects of African American middle-class identity that study participants worked to foster in their children. Through this research, the book expands on and revises theories related to parenting, racial identity formation, and family and work conflict by complicating existing frameworks for understanding the cultural pushes and pulls that influence mothers' decision-making"--Provided by publisher.

Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

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