Description

Book Synopsis
Julie A. Wilson and Emily Chivers Yochim explore how working- and middle-class mothers of young children negotiate difficulties of holding a family together during difficulties such as job loss, health scares, and weakening social services through their everyday engagement with digital media.

Trade Review
"... women, with children or without, have a lot to gain from this smart, insightful work. It outlines a nagging problem so specific I lacked a clear definition of it before I started reading.... It’s an idea rooted directly in our dominant political ideology, one that many cannot name: neoliberalism." -- Amani Newton * Pittsburgh City Paper *
"Mothering through Precarity ... richly illustrates what a theoretically, conceptually and emotionally confused and paradoxical situation women are in with respect to an online world that offers family-enhancing information and advice, communicative solace and flexible income-earning opportunities, but also exploits their ongoing efforts at maintaining a positive family environment by creating new anxieties and offering meagre financial returns.... After reading this book, it is not so difficult to understand why some women in the Rust Belt voted for Donald Trump’s media-fuelled promises of a better future."
-- E. Stina Lyon * Times Higher Education *
"Mothering through Precarity is at its best when it demonstrates digital media as a crucial mechanism by which mothers daily discipline themselves to feel ever more optimistic and upbeat in spite of the pervasive uncertainty they feel.... Suitable for undergraduate and graduate courses at the intersection of family, gender, and media, we recommend this book, and in particular chapter three and the Conclusion, for sections highlighting the use of digital media in families."
-- Elissa Zeno and Allison J. Pugh * Gender & Society *
"Mothering Through Precarity is a critical contribution to the study of . . . the affective and psychic life of neoliberalism. . . . With genuine empathy and care for their interviewees, Wilson and Chivers Yochim show how mothers are caught up in the forces of precarization that threaten their families, and how they turn to the digital mamasphere to resist the turbulences of advanced neoliberalism." -- Shani Orgad * Journal of Communication Inquiry *
"This rich approach to the topic and subjects of inquiry makes this book valuable to feminist media and cultural studies’ scholars, motherhood studies, and those with an interest in the gendered aspects of new media and affect theory. . . . An original and important scholarly contribution on gendered digital culture and the growing mamasphere." -- Tisha Dejmanee * International Journal of Communication *
"A well-written and well-argued book about modern motherhood. . . both thought-provoking and deeply saddening. . . . This book is recommended for scholars of motherhood, contemporary gender performance, neoliberalism, and digital media consumption." -- Saralyn McKinnon-Crowley * Resources for Gender and Women's Studies *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. The Digital Mundane: Mothering, Media, and Precarity 1
1. Mother Loads: Why "Good" Mothers Are Anxious 31
2. Mamapreneurialism: Family Appreciation in the Digital Mundane 65
3. Digital Entanglements: Staying Happy in the Mamasphere 103
4. Individualized Solidarities: Privatizing Happiness Together 137
Conclusion. Socializing Happiness (or, Why We Wrote an Unhappy Book) 169
Afterword. Packets and Pockets 185
Notes 189
Bibliography 205
Index 213

Mothering through Precarity

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    A Hardback by Julie A. Wilson, Emily Chivers Yochim

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 24/03/2017
      ISBN13: 9780822363361, 978-0822363361
      ISBN10: 0822363364

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Julie A. Wilson and Emily Chivers Yochim explore how working- and middle-class mothers of young children negotiate difficulties of holding a family together during difficulties such as job loss, health scares, and weakening social services through their everyday engagement with digital media.

      Trade Review
      "... women, with children or without, have a lot to gain from this smart, insightful work. It outlines a nagging problem so specific I lacked a clear definition of it before I started reading.... It’s an idea rooted directly in our dominant political ideology, one that many cannot name: neoliberalism." -- Amani Newton * Pittsburgh City Paper *
      "Mothering through Precarity ... richly illustrates what a theoretically, conceptually and emotionally confused and paradoxical situation women are in with respect to an online world that offers family-enhancing information and advice, communicative solace and flexible income-earning opportunities, but also exploits their ongoing efforts at maintaining a positive family environment by creating new anxieties and offering meagre financial returns.... After reading this book, it is not so difficult to understand why some women in the Rust Belt voted for Donald Trump’s media-fuelled promises of a better future."
      -- E. Stina Lyon * Times Higher Education *
      "Mothering through Precarity is at its best when it demonstrates digital media as a crucial mechanism by which mothers daily discipline themselves to feel ever more optimistic and upbeat in spite of the pervasive uncertainty they feel.... Suitable for undergraduate and graduate courses at the intersection of family, gender, and media, we recommend this book, and in particular chapter three and the Conclusion, for sections highlighting the use of digital media in families."
      -- Elissa Zeno and Allison J. Pugh * Gender & Society *
      "Mothering Through Precarity is a critical contribution to the study of . . . the affective and psychic life of neoliberalism. . . . With genuine empathy and care for their interviewees, Wilson and Chivers Yochim show how mothers are caught up in the forces of precarization that threaten their families, and how they turn to the digital mamasphere to resist the turbulences of advanced neoliberalism." -- Shani Orgad * Journal of Communication Inquiry *
      "This rich approach to the topic and subjects of inquiry makes this book valuable to feminist media and cultural studies’ scholars, motherhood studies, and those with an interest in the gendered aspects of new media and affect theory. . . . An original and important scholarly contribution on gendered digital culture and the growing mamasphere." -- Tisha Dejmanee * International Journal of Communication *
      "A well-written and well-argued book about modern motherhood. . . both thought-provoking and deeply saddening. . . . This book is recommended for scholars of motherhood, contemporary gender performance, neoliberalism, and digital media consumption." -- Saralyn McKinnon-Crowley * Resources for Gender and Women's Studies *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      Introduction. The Digital Mundane: Mothering, Media, and Precarity 1
      1. Mother Loads: Why "Good" Mothers Are Anxious 31
      2. Mamapreneurialism: Family Appreciation in the Digital Mundane 65
      3. Digital Entanglements: Staying Happy in the Mamasphere 103
      4. Individualized Solidarities: Privatizing Happiness Together 137
      Conclusion. Socializing Happiness (or, Why We Wrote an Unhappy Book) 169
      Afterword. Packets and Pockets 185
      Notes 189
      Bibliography 205
      Index 213

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