Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On

Despite an ever-greater interest in mothering over the decade since 2009, it seems clear that accounts of maternal experiences today still routinely express fears of failure and chronic frustration. I connect this with time constraints arising from the long hours of paid work most mothers are now pe...

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Main Author: Lynne Segal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2020-12-01
Series:Studies in the Maternal
Online Access:https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4313/
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spelling doaj-588df23e253b40a38309e3b2aa053a402021-08-18T10:02:03ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesStudies in the Maternal1759-04342020-12-0113110.16995/sim.272Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years OnLynne Segal0 Despite an ever-greater interest in mothering over the decade since 2009, it seems clear that accounts of maternal experiences today still routinely express fears of failure and chronic frustration. I connect this with time constraints arising from the long hours of paid work most mothers are now performing, alongside ongoing welfare cuts generally and the privatisation or outsourcing of public resources – especially since 2010. This tells me that caretaking generally, and mothering in particular, can never be decisively separated from the broader political arena. On the contrary, we need to place reproductive politics, and what is now recognised as a general ‘crisis of care’, at the very heart of politics. Thus, I conclude that the only way forward is to replace the long outdated, traditional notion of the male breadwinner, now superseded by the realities of the universal breadwinner, with genuine support for a notion of the universal caregiver. This would ensure policies attempting to provide everyone with the time and resources necessary to care for their own dependent children, if they are parents, or to support others who depend on them for care, alongside possibilities for maintaining community life and engaging in the preservation of the world itself.https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4313/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynne Segal
spellingShingle Lynne Segal
Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
Studies in the Maternal
author_facet Lynne Segal
author_sort Lynne Segal
title Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
title_short Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
title_full Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
title_fullStr Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
title_full_unstemmed Embedding Mothering at the Heart of Politics: Mamsie, Ten Years On
title_sort embedding mothering at the heart of politics: mamsie, ten years on
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Studies in the Maternal
issn 1759-0434
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Despite an ever-greater interest in mothering over the decade since 2009, it seems clear that accounts of maternal experiences today still routinely express fears of failure and chronic frustration. I connect this with time constraints arising from the long hours of paid work most mothers are now performing, alongside ongoing welfare cuts generally and the privatisation or outsourcing of public resources – especially since 2010. This tells me that caretaking generally, and mothering in particular, can never be decisively separated from the broader political arena. On the contrary, we need to place reproductive politics, and what is now recognised as a general ‘crisis of care’, at the very heart of politics. Thus, I conclude that the only way forward is to replace the long outdated, traditional notion of the male breadwinner, now superseded by the realities of the universal breadwinner, with genuine support for a notion of the universal caregiver. This would ensure policies attempting to provide everyone with the time and resources necessary to care for their own dependent children, if they are parents, or to support others who depend on them for care, alongside possibilities for maintaining community life and engaging in the preservation of the world itself.
url https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4313/
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