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'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'.

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'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'. / Sunderland, Jane.
In: Discourse and Society, Vol. 17, No. 4, 07.2006, p. 503-528.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Vancouver

Sunderland J. 'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'. Discourse and Society. 2006 Jul;17(4):503-528. doi: 10.1177/0957926506063126

Author

Sunderland, Jane. / 'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'. In: Discourse and Society. 2006 ; Vol. 17, No. 4. pp. 503-528.

Bibtex

@article{e3b9a8afb906411cb7d2ce98b14bed8a,
title = "'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'.",
abstract = "Many magazines devoted to the topic of the care of babies and young children now have titles which include some variation of parent rather than of mother (e.g. Parent and Child rather than Mother and Baby). This corresponds to evident new directions in social practices, and suggests a desire of the publishers to appeal to female and male readers. Whether both mothers and fathers are addressed and represented in the magazines makes these magazines particularly interesting sites for the study of fatherhood discourses. In this study, three magazines (Parents, Parenting and Baby Years) were analysed in terms of the extent to which the language of their advice features addressed women and/or men, and whether they could be seen as promoting {\textquoteleft}shared parenting{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}hands-on{\textquoteright} fatherhood, or at least a father-friendly environment. An examination of linguistic representation (in particular, of fathers), visuals, {\textquoteleft}voices{\textquoteright}, gendered stereotypes and gendered discourses of parenting suggested that fathers are in fact not being fully addressed. These magazines may be lagging behind current social change and practices in {\textquoteleft}Western{\textquoteright} parenting.",
keywords = "discourses • fatherhood • gender • magazines • parenting • stereotypes",
author = "Jane Sunderland",
year = "2006",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1177/0957926506063126",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "503--528",
journal = "Discourse and Society",
issn = "0957-9265",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - 'Parenting' or 'mothering': the case of modern childcare magazines'.

AU - Sunderland, Jane

PY - 2006/7

Y1 - 2006/7

N2 - Many magazines devoted to the topic of the care of babies and young children now have titles which include some variation of parent rather than of mother (e.g. Parent and Child rather than Mother and Baby). This corresponds to evident new directions in social practices, and suggests a desire of the publishers to appeal to female and male readers. Whether both mothers and fathers are addressed and represented in the magazines makes these magazines particularly interesting sites for the study of fatherhood discourses. In this study, three magazines (Parents, Parenting and Baby Years) were analysed in terms of the extent to which the language of their advice features addressed women and/or men, and whether they could be seen as promoting ‘shared parenting’, ‘hands-on’ fatherhood, or at least a father-friendly environment. An examination of linguistic representation (in particular, of fathers), visuals, ‘voices’, gendered stereotypes and gendered discourses of parenting suggested that fathers are in fact not being fully addressed. These magazines may be lagging behind current social change and practices in ‘Western’ parenting.

AB - Many magazines devoted to the topic of the care of babies and young children now have titles which include some variation of parent rather than of mother (e.g. Parent and Child rather than Mother and Baby). This corresponds to evident new directions in social practices, and suggests a desire of the publishers to appeal to female and male readers. Whether both mothers and fathers are addressed and represented in the magazines makes these magazines particularly interesting sites for the study of fatherhood discourses. In this study, three magazines (Parents, Parenting and Baby Years) were analysed in terms of the extent to which the language of their advice features addressed women and/or men, and whether they could be seen as promoting ‘shared parenting’, ‘hands-on’ fatherhood, or at least a father-friendly environment. An examination of linguistic representation (in particular, of fathers), visuals, ‘voices’, gendered stereotypes and gendered discourses of parenting suggested that fathers are in fact not being fully addressed. These magazines may be lagging behind current social change and practices in ‘Western’ parenting.

KW - discourses • fatherhood • gender • magazines • parenting • stereotypes

U2 - 10.1177/0957926506063126

DO - 10.1177/0957926506063126

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 503

EP - 528

JO - Discourse and Society

JF - Discourse and Society

SN - 0957-9265

IS - 4

ER -