• Produktbild: Modern Motherhood and Women's Dual Identities
  • Produktbild: Modern Motherhood and Women's Dual Identities

Modern Motherhood and Women's Dual Identities Rewriting the Sexual Contract

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

14.01.2020

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

336

Maße (L/B/H)

23.4/15.6/1.8 cm

Gewicht

620 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-46012-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

14.01.2020

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

336

Maße (L/B/H)

23.4/15.6/1.8 cm

Gewicht

620 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-46012-9

Herstelleradresse

Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Modern Motherhood and Women's Dual Identities
  • Produktbild: Modern Motherhood and Women's Dual Identities
  • PART ONE: SETTING THE SCENE

    CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION

    1.1 On mothers and modernity

    1.2 Key questions

    1.3 Definitions and theoretical framework

    1.4 Situating the study and defining the theoretical argument

    1.5 Situating the study and defining the empirical research

    1.6 Scratching the empirical itch

    CHAPTER 2: METHODOLOGY

    2.1 Introduction

    2.2 Establishing the parametres: structure and agency

    2.3 Classical sociology: Durkheim, Weber and Marx

    2.4 Feminist methodology and epistemology

      1. Postmodernism and its discontents
      2. Research methodology: structure and agency revisited
      3. Theoretical research
        1. Situating the self
        2. Theory as research
        3. Interdisciplinarity

        2.8 Empirical research

        2.9 Recruitment and interviews

        2.10 Interpreting the data

        2.11 Conclusions

        PART TWO: PHILOSOPHICAL, HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL CONTEXT

        CHAPTER 3: The social and sexual contracts

        3.1 Introduction

        3.2 The social contract and the birth of 'the individual'

          1. The philosophers: Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau (deleted)
          2. Summarising the social contract

          3.5 The 'sexual contract' or why women cannot be 'individuals'

              1. Women's position in 'the state of nature'
              2. The emergence of 'fraternal patriarchy'
              3. Women's contradictory status in civil society
              4. Problems with the category of 'the individual'

              3.6 Duality theory or on the emergence of sovereign women

              3.7 Conclusion

              CHAPTER 4: The invention of motherhood and the 'new woman': 1750-1920

              4.1 Introduction

              4.2 The traditional family: women's work and family roles

              4.3 Transitions from feudal to industrial society 1600-1750: proto-industrialisation 1600-1750

              4.4 Industrialisation 1750-1850: class division and the surge of sentiment

              4.5 Working class women and the emergence of wage labour: 1750-1900

              4.6 Middle-class women and the 'invention of motherhood': 1750-1900

              4.7 The 'New Woman': shadow to the 'Angel in the House'

              4.8 'Woman Right' Activists

              4.9 New Women at the fin de siecle

              4.10 Conclusion

              CHAPTER 5: What is the new sexual contract?

              5.1 Introduction

              5.2 Late modernity: the end of 'society' and the rise of 'the social'

              5.3 Individualisation: self-making in late modernity

              5.4 Women in late modernity: mapping the contours of freedom and constraint

              5.4.1 Education

              5.4.2 Employment

              5.4.3 Families now 5.4.4 Domestic division of labour

              5.5 Deregulated patriarchy and the new sexual contract

              5.6 Women's two modes of self (check heading)

              5.7 The problematic as it stands

              PART THREE: EMPIRICAL RESEARCH

              CHAPTER 6: Becoming a mother: or, revisiting the sexual contract

              6.1 Introduction

              6.2 Individualised partnering and parenting

              6.3 The traditionalisation process and its discontents

              6.4 Analysis and conclusion

              CHAPTER 7: Leaving the default position in the home

              7.1 Introduction

              7.2 Revolving out the door: maternal transformations

              7.3 Revolving in the door: paternal and partner transformations

              7.4 External responses: envy, opprobrium, accolade

              7.5 Analysis and conclusion

              CHAPTER 8: Reconstructing the sexual contract

              8.1 Introduction

              8.2 Doubled selves, doubled lives and time-space de-sequencing

              8.3 Domestic divisions of labour and leisure revisited

              8.4 Rewriting the sexual contract: on the democratisation of intimacy

              8.5 Analysis and Conclusion

              PART FOUR: CONCLUSION

              CHAPTER 9: Concluding the contract: women in the twenty-first century

              9.1 Theoretical overview

              9.2 Research problematic

              9.3 Research findings

              9.4 Women in the twenty-first century

              NOTES

              BIBLIOGRAPHY