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Tough love in tough times

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Tough love in tough times. / Jensen, Tracey Louisa.
In: Studies in The Maternal, Vol. 4, No. 2, 2012, p. 1-26.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, TL 2012, 'Tough love in tough times', Studies in The Maternal, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 1-26. https://doi.org/10.16995/sim.35

APA

Jensen, T. L. (2012). Tough love in tough times. Studies in The Maternal, 4(2), 1-26. https://doi.org/10.16995/sim.35

Vancouver

Jensen TL. Tough love in tough times. Studies in The Maternal. 2012;4(2):1-26. doi: 10.16995/sim.35

Author

Jensen, Tracey Louisa. / Tough love in tough times. In: Studies in The Maternal. 2012 ; Vol. 4, No. 2. pp. 1-26.

Bibtex

@article{16aab960f3004e829b401ac6021da11c,
title = "Tough love in tough times",
abstract = "This paper examines the cultural politics of 'thrift' and 'tough love'. It reflects upon the significance of notions of 'good parenting' in policy and popular debates around social mobility and aspiration. In particular, it reviews the profound importance of notions of 'poor parenting' in the culturalisation of poverty, whereby poverty is seen to be a symptom of 'poor' conduct and behaviour, rather than of deeply entrenched systemic inequalities. This paper considers how the recent 'austerity' agenda has been taken up as a cultural annotation in the politicisation of parenting, (re)producing nostalgic fantasies of post-war spirit, national resilience and individual family responsibility. This article attends to how discourses of thrift and tough love are stitched together in the current cultural climate of austerity, and tracks these fantasies across a range of policy, media and cultural sites. It argues that these discourses locate the causes of the current financial crisis in spendthrift habits, consumer incompetence, over-consumption and wastefulness. It argues that thrift fantasies generate and circulate powerful cultural figurations of happy gendered restraint, such as the 'happy housewife', which serve as ideological signs of an imagined capacity for families to thrive through times of hardship. This paper maps the emerging affective incitements around austerity, gender, family and the future, in order to question the romances of austerity, and specifically of austerity parenting, and explore how austerity is being incorporated into cruelly optimistic visions of the future, which both deny existing social inequality and promise future happiness through the embrace of thrift.",
author = "Jensen, {Tracey Louisa}",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.16995/sim.35",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "1--26",
journal = "Studies in The Maternal",
issn = "1759-0434",
publisher = "Open Library of Humanities",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tough love in tough times

AU - Jensen, Tracey Louisa

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - This paper examines the cultural politics of 'thrift' and 'tough love'. It reflects upon the significance of notions of 'good parenting' in policy and popular debates around social mobility and aspiration. In particular, it reviews the profound importance of notions of 'poor parenting' in the culturalisation of poverty, whereby poverty is seen to be a symptom of 'poor' conduct and behaviour, rather than of deeply entrenched systemic inequalities. This paper considers how the recent 'austerity' agenda has been taken up as a cultural annotation in the politicisation of parenting, (re)producing nostalgic fantasies of post-war spirit, national resilience and individual family responsibility. This article attends to how discourses of thrift and tough love are stitched together in the current cultural climate of austerity, and tracks these fantasies across a range of policy, media and cultural sites. It argues that these discourses locate the causes of the current financial crisis in spendthrift habits, consumer incompetence, over-consumption and wastefulness. It argues that thrift fantasies generate and circulate powerful cultural figurations of happy gendered restraint, such as the 'happy housewife', which serve as ideological signs of an imagined capacity for families to thrive through times of hardship. This paper maps the emerging affective incitements around austerity, gender, family and the future, in order to question the romances of austerity, and specifically of austerity parenting, and explore how austerity is being incorporated into cruelly optimistic visions of the future, which both deny existing social inequality and promise future happiness through the embrace of thrift.

AB - This paper examines the cultural politics of 'thrift' and 'tough love'. It reflects upon the significance of notions of 'good parenting' in policy and popular debates around social mobility and aspiration. In particular, it reviews the profound importance of notions of 'poor parenting' in the culturalisation of poverty, whereby poverty is seen to be a symptom of 'poor' conduct and behaviour, rather than of deeply entrenched systemic inequalities. This paper considers how the recent 'austerity' agenda has been taken up as a cultural annotation in the politicisation of parenting, (re)producing nostalgic fantasies of post-war spirit, national resilience and individual family responsibility. This article attends to how discourses of thrift and tough love are stitched together in the current cultural climate of austerity, and tracks these fantasies across a range of policy, media and cultural sites. It argues that these discourses locate the causes of the current financial crisis in spendthrift habits, consumer incompetence, over-consumption and wastefulness. It argues that thrift fantasies generate and circulate powerful cultural figurations of happy gendered restraint, such as the 'happy housewife', which serve as ideological signs of an imagined capacity for families to thrive through times of hardship. This paper maps the emerging affective incitements around austerity, gender, family and the future, in order to question the romances of austerity, and specifically of austerity parenting, and explore how austerity is being incorporated into cruelly optimistic visions of the future, which both deny existing social inequality and promise future happiness through the embrace of thrift.

U2 - 10.16995/sim.35

DO - 10.16995/sim.35

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 1

EP - 26

JO - Studies in The Maternal

JF - Studies in The Maternal

SN - 1759-0434

IS - 2

ER -