Maternal Narratives in Public Contexts
Shaping Perspectives and Enacting Identities
Rachel Davidson author Catherine A Dobris author Kim White-Mills author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:12th Feb '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In this book, authors explore the underpinnings of maternal identity in contemporary culture through analyses of images, definitions, behaviors, and ideologies found in film, television, and social media contexts and in academic, corporate, and political spheres. The book reveals how we define, recognize, and enact maternal identity.
Maternal Narratives in Public Contexts: Shaping Perspectives and Enacting Identities brings together critical research on the construction and enactment of mothering and motherhood in public spheres. The book is divided into two parts – in the first part, authors examine how prevailing ideals of motherhood influence twenty-first century culture by exploring iterations of maternal identity in various media forms, from Dr. Spock’s self-help guide to film and small-screen entertainment. In the second part, the authors investigate how tropes of motherhood manifest and operate in academia, the workplace, and in political spheres. Ultimately, this book explores how maternal identities are both formed and articulated in public discourse, arguing that rhetorical influences inform the ways in which we define, recognize, and enact maternal identities and the sociocultural ramifications that result within communication contexts. Scholars of communication, media studies, film and television studies, cultural studies, rhetoric, and women’s and gender studies will find this book of particular interest.
ISBN: 9781666923902
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
276 pages