Staging Motherhood

Staging Motherhood
Author: J. Komporaly
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2006-10-31
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 023059848X

Focusing on post-1956 British women playwrights, this book questions to what extent transformations in women's lives have impacted on theatre. Contributing to a range of discourses, including gender studies, cultural studies and theatre and performance studies, this timely volume is crucial to our understanding of women's drama in this period.

(Re)Constructing Maternal Performance in Twentieth-Century American Drama

(Re)Constructing Maternal Performance in Twentieth-Century American Drama
Author: L. Bailey McDaniel
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2013-09-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1137299576

Looking at a century of American theatre, McDaniel investigates how race-based notions of maternal performance become sites of resistance to cultural and political hierarchies. This book considers how the construction of mothering as universally women's work obscures additional, equally constructed subdivisions based in race and class.

Maternal Performance

Maternal Performance
Author: Lena Šimić
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2021-11-27
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 3030802264

Maternal Performance: Feminist Relations bridges the fields of performance, feminism, maternal studies, and ethics. It loosely follows the life course with chapters on maternal loss, pregnancy, birth, aftermath, maintenance, generations, and futures. Performance and the maternal have an affinity as both are lived through the body of the mother/artist, are played out in real time, and are concerned with creating ethical relationships with an other – be that other the child, the theatrical audience, or our wider communities. The authors contend that maternal performance takes the largely hidden, private and domestic work of mothering and makes it worthy of consideration and contemplation within the public sphere.

Birthing Black Mothers

Birthing Black Mothers
Author: Jennifer C. Nash
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2021-07-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1478021721

In Birthing Black Mothers Black feminist theorist Jennifer C. Nash examines how the figure of the “Black mother” has become a powerful political category. “Mothering while Black” has become synonymous with crisis as well as a site of cultural interest, empathy, fascination, and support. Cast as suffering and traumatized by their proximity to Black death—especially through medical racism and state-sanctioned police violence—Black mothers are often rendered as one-dimensional symbols of tragic heroism. In contrast, Nash examines Black mothers’ self-representations and public performances of motherhood—including Black doulas and breastfeeding advocates alongside celebrities such as Beyoncé, Serena Williams, and Michelle Obama—that are not rooted in loss. Through cultural critique and in-depth interviews, Nash acknowledges the complexities of Black motherhood outside its use as political currency. Throughout, Nash imagines a Black feminist project that refuses the lure of locating the precarity of Black life in women and instead invites readers to theorize, organize, and dream into being new modes of Black motherhood.

Staging Early Modern Romance

Staging Early Modern Romance
Author: Mary Ellen Lamb
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2009-01-13
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 1135895252

This collection recovers the continuities between two modes of romance that have long been separated from one another in critical discourse: the prose fictions that early moderns often referred to as romances, and Shakespeare's late plays, which have often been termed 'romances' since Dowden.

(M)Other Perspectives

(M)Other Perspectives
Author: Lynn Deboeck
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2023-06-01
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1000887480

This anthology examines maternity in contemporary performance at the intersection of a wide range of topics from nationhood to mental health, queer parenting, embodied dramaturgy, cultural practice, and immigration. Across the breadth of these themes, we interrogate the cultural implications and politics of how we script, perform, receive, and define mothers, challenging many of the normalizing and patriarchal tropes associated with the mother-as-character. This book includes critical essays examining twenty-first century dramatic literature, first-hand ethnographic accounts of motherhood in practice, interviews, feminist manifestos, and artist reflections. In its deliberately curated variety, this collection seeks to resist homogeneity and offer instead a range of approaches to key questions: what versions of motherhood get staged, and why? And what do dramatic representations tell us about the role of mothers in our own fraught contemporary moment? This collection will be of great interest to those in academia who are teaching, researching, or studying in the fields of Theatre and Performance Studies, American Studies, and Feminist and Gender Studies.

The End of Children?

The End of Children?
Author: Graham Allan
Publisher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2012
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0774821922

"Fertility rates have fallen dramatically around the world. In some countries, there are no longer enough children being born to replace adult populations. The disappearance of children is a matter of concern matched only by fears that childhood is becoming too structured or not structured enough, too short or too long, or just simply too different from the idealized childhoods of the past.

Laboring Mothers

Laboring Mothers
Author: Ellen Malenas Ledoux
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2023-11-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0813950295

Motherhood inherently involves labor. The seemingly perennial notion that paid work outside the home and motherhood are incompatible, however, grows out of specific cultural conditions established in Britain and her colonies during the long eighteenth century. With Laboring Mothers, Ellen Malenas Ledoux synthesizes and expands on two feminist dialogues to deliver an innovative transatlantic cultural history of working motherhood. Addressing both actual historical women and fabricated representations of a type, Ledoux demonstrates how contingent ideas about the public sphere and maternity functioned together to create systems of power and privilege among working mothers. Popular culture has long thrown doubt on the idea that women can be both productive and reproductive at the same time. Although the critical task of raising and providing for a family should, in theory, foster solidarity, this has not historically proven the case. Laboring Mothers demonstrates how contemporary associations surrounding economic status, race, and working motherhood have their roots in an antiquated and rigid system of inequality among women that dates back to the Enlightenment.

Care(ful) Relationships between Mothers and the Caregivers They Hire

Care(ful) Relationships between Mothers and the Caregivers They Hire
Author: Andrea O'Reilly
Publisher: Demeter Press
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2023-12-14
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1772584835

Care(ful) Relationships between Mothers and the Caregivers They Hire offers an interdisciplinary and international approach to the complex issues of carework, primarily focusing on childcare. The diverse collection of authors center their examinations of care by interrogating how class, race, and gender interplay to create inequity and potential. The work shared in Care(ful) Relationships draws from various disciplines, including sociology, anthropology, media studies, literary and dramatic analysis, history, and women' s studies while also addressing carework as it is depicted in ages past and contemporary culture. The collection not only seeks to challenge misconceptions and inequity but also examine how the unique personal relationships that form in the labor of care can yield prosocial change.

Performing Maternity in Early Modern England

Performing Maternity in Early Modern England
Author: Kathryn M. Moncrief
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2007-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780754661177

The essays in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England explore maternity's textual and cultural representation, performative aspects and practical consequences from 1540-1690. They emphasize that the embodied, repeated and public nature of maternity defines it as inherently performative and ultimately central to the production of gender identity in the period.