Mothering Care in the Contemporary Novel
Unknown Others, Imaginative Labour and the Ethics of Care
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:31st Oct '26
£90.00
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Examining contemporary depictions of less-than-adequate mothers, Michelle Chiang reveals how care relations are fundamentally othering experiences, even between a mother and a child. Employing maternal theory and phenomenological philosophy as lenses to analyse the selected novels, Chiang offers an account of the imaginative labour that goes into caring for an other who is not entirely knowable. She argues that carers must imaginatively labour to confront the limits of their knowledge in care relations. When carers fail to exercise a dynamic imagination to confront the limits of their knowledge, they risk losing sight of the cared-for as an individual inhabiting time orientations and contextual spaces that might differ from theirs. In doing so, care may collapse into a search for certainty and control, which almost always entails the violence of coercion.
Chiang’s study is a sophisticated and important intervention in care ethics and medical humanities, harnessing literary aesthetics in a new way. The case it makes for dynamic imagination as a key component of care is compelling, and the way it reconceives the idea of ‘mothering’ no less distinctive or persuasive. A book that will challenge and engage. -- Elizabeth Barry, University of Warwick
ISBN: 9781399561174
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
200 pages