Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example

The mainstream literature on teenage pregnancy highlights teenagers' inadequate mothering as an area of disquiet. `Revisionists', such as feminist critics, point out that a confluence of negative social factors is implicated in teenagers' mothering abilities. Whether arguing that teen...

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Main Author: Macleod, Catriona
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications Ltd 2001
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007874
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-62562018-12-11T04:30:22ZTeenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African exampleMacleod, CatrionaThe mainstream literature on teenage pregnancy highlights teenagers' inadequate mothering as an area of disquiet. `Revisionists', such as feminist critics, point out that a confluence of negative social factors is implicated in teenagers' mothering abilities. Whether arguing that teenagers make bad mothers or defending them against this, the literature relies on the `invention of "good" mothering'. In this article I highlight the taken-for-granted assumptions concerning mothering (mothering as an essentialized dyad; mothering as a skill; motherhood as a pathway to adulthood; fathering as the absent trace) appearing in the scientific literature on teenage pregnancy in South Africa. I indicate how these assumptions are implicated in the regulation of mothering through the positioning of the teenage mother as the pathologized other, the splitting of the public from the private, domestic space of mothering, and the legitimation of the professionalization of mothering. I explore the gendered implications of the representations of mothering in this literature.SAGE Publications Ltd2001Article31 pagespdfvital:6256http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007874English
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language English
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description The mainstream literature on teenage pregnancy highlights teenagers' inadequate mothering as an area of disquiet. `Revisionists', such as feminist critics, point out that a confluence of negative social factors is implicated in teenagers' mothering abilities. Whether arguing that teenagers make bad mothers or defending them against this, the literature relies on the `invention of "good" mothering'. In this article I highlight the taken-for-granted assumptions concerning mothering (mothering as an essentialized dyad; mothering as a skill; motherhood as a pathway to adulthood; fathering as the absent trace) appearing in the scientific literature on teenage pregnancy in South Africa. I indicate how these assumptions are implicated in the regulation of mothering through the positioning of the teenage mother as the pathologized other, the splitting of the public from the private, domestic space of mothering, and the legitimation of the professionalization of mothering. I explore the gendered implications of the representations of mothering in this literature.
author Macleod, Catriona
spellingShingle Macleod, Catriona
Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
author_facet Macleod, Catriona
author_sort Macleod, Catriona
title Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
title_short Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
title_full Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
title_fullStr Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
title_full_unstemmed Teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the South African example
title_sort teenage motherhood and the regulation of mothering in the scientific literature: the south african example
publisher SAGE Publications Ltd
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007874
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