Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity.
This study explores fatherhood in contemporary Canadian society by drawing on the experiences of nine full-time care-giving fathers in Vancouver, Canada. Using a social constructionist epistemology, the study explored how fathers who are primary caregivers to their young children construct masculini...
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ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-39872015-01-29T16:52:00Z Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. Supporting caregiving fathers Elischer, Nicola Ball, Jessica father primary caregiving parenting community support social support informational support programs parental leave masculinity gender ideology This study explores fatherhood in contemporary Canadian society by drawing on the experiences of nine full-time care-giving fathers in Vancouver, Canada. Using a social constructionist epistemology, the study explored how fathers who are primary caregivers to their young children construct masculinity, how they enact primary care-giving, and how they can be better supported within communities. Fathers were recruited through posters in community centres and through snowball sampling and volunteered to participate in interviews lasting between one and three hours. Interviews were audio-taped, transcribed and analysed using pragmatic thematic analysis. Three key themes were constructed to represent the fathers’ self-reported experiences: fathers’ enactment of primary care-giving; fathers’ constructions of masculinity within dominant discourses of masculinity and care; and father’s support needs. Findings suggest that for these primary care-giving fathers, care-giving is active and adventurous, and egalitarian beliefs and roles regarding child care and domestic responsibility predominate within their co-parenting relationship. Traditional Euro-western masculine ideology tends to give way to a “hybrid” ideology that emphasizes affection, emotional intelligence, and caring for one’s family as a whole. Fathers indicated a preference for supports that are self-sought such as the internet and support from partners, and informal supports such as community events and time with peers to structured supports provided by community programs. Fathers who reported benefits from formal community programs offered insight into father-friendly practices. Stigma about primary care-giving by fathers was a significant theme constructed from the data. Implications for community programs for families and primary care-giving fathers in particular are discussed. Graduate 2012-05-09T22:08:06Z 2012-05-09T22:08:06Z 2012 2012-05-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3987 English en Available to the World Wide Web |
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English en |
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father primary caregiving parenting community support social support informational support programs parental leave masculinity gender ideology |
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father primary caregiving parenting community support social support informational support programs parental leave masculinity gender ideology Elischer, Nicola Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
description |
This study explores fatherhood in contemporary Canadian society by drawing on the experiences of nine full-time care-giving fathers in Vancouver, Canada. Using a social constructionist epistemology, the study explored how fathers who are primary caregivers to their young children construct masculinity, how they enact primary care-giving, and how they can be better supported within communities. Fathers were recruited through posters in community centres and through snowball sampling and volunteered to participate in interviews lasting between one and three hours. Interviews were audio-taped, transcribed and analysed using pragmatic thematic analysis. Three key themes were constructed to represent the fathers’ self-reported experiences: fathers’ enactment of primary care-giving; fathers’ constructions of masculinity within dominant discourses of masculinity and care; and father’s support needs. Findings suggest that for these primary care-giving fathers, care-giving is active and adventurous, and egalitarian beliefs and roles regarding child care and domestic responsibility predominate within their co-parenting relationship. Traditional Euro-western masculine ideology tends to give way to a “hybrid” ideology that emphasizes affection, emotional intelligence, and caring for one’s family as a whole. Fathers indicated a preference for supports that are self-sought such as the internet and support from partners, and informal supports such as community events and time with peers to structured supports provided by community programs. Fathers who reported benefits from formal community programs offered insight into father-friendly practices. Stigma about primary care-giving by fathers was a significant theme constructed from the data. Implications for community programs for families and primary care-giving fathers in particular are discussed. === Graduate |
author2 |
Ball, Jessica |
author_facet |
Ball, Jessica Elischer, Nicola |
author |
Elischer, Nicola |
author_sort |
Elischer, Nicola |
title |
Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
title_short |
Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
title_full |
Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
title_fullStr |
Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
title_sort |
supporting care-giving fathers: fathers' perspectives of work, care and masculinity. |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3987 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT elischernicola supportingcaregivingfathersfathersperspectivesofworkcareandmasculinity AT elischernicola supportingcaregivingfathers |
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1716729442827501568 |