Mothers Who Deliver: Feminist Interventions in Public and Interpersonal Discourse brings together essays that focus on mothering as an intelligent practice, deliberately reinvented and rearticulated by mothers themselves. The contributors to this watershed volume focus on subjects ranging from mothers in children’s picture books and mothers writing blogs to global maternal activism and mothers raising gay sons. Distinguishing itself from much writing about motherhood today, Mothers Who Deliver focuses on forward-looking arguments and new forms of knowledge about the practice of mothering instead of remaining solely within the realm of critique. Together, the essays create a compelling argument about the possibilities of empowered mothering.
Table of Content
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Delivering Mothering Studies
Jocelyn Fenton Stitt and Pegeen Reichert Powell
Part 1. Feminist Interventions in Public Discourse
1. Contrapuntal Delivery and Reception of Hildegard Westerkamp’s Electrovocal Performance Work on Mothering,
Moments of Laughter
Andra Mc Cartney
2. The Empty Mirror No More: Mother-Daughter Relationship and Film Spectatorship in Patricia Cardoso’s
Real Women Have Curves
Nan Ma
3. Cyborg Mothering
Shelley Park
4. “Mommyblogging
Is a Radical Act”: Weblog Communities and the Construction of Maternal Identities
Lisa Hammond
5. “The Pencilling Mamma”: Public Motherhood in Alice Meynell’s Essays on Children
Lee Behlman
6. Picturing Mom: Mythic and Real Mothers in Children’s Picture Books
Gretchen Papazian
Part 2. Feminist Interventions in Interpersonal Discourse
7. More than Talk: Single Mothers Claiming Space and Subjectivity on the University Campus
Jillian M. Duquaine-Watson
8. From Postcolonial to Postpartum: Pedagogical Politics of Motherhood
Jocelyn Fenton Stitt
9. Constrained Agency: British Heterosexual Mothers of Homosexual Sons
Janet Peukert
10. Writing the Script: Finding a Language for Mothering
Lynn Kuechle
11. From Gestation to Delivery: The Embodied Activist Mothering of Cindy Sheehan and Jennifer Schumaker
Natalie Wilson
12. Political Motherhood in the United States and Argentina
Meghan Gibbons
Epilogue: Power in a Movement
Judith Stadtman Tucker
List of Contributors
Index
About the author
Jocelyn Fenton Stitt is Associate Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies at Minnesota State University, Mankato.
Pegeen Reichert Powell is Assistant Professor of English at Columbia College Chicago.