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Full Description
In global politics, women's bodies are policed, objectified, surveilled, and feared, with particular attention paid to both their met or unmet procreative potential. While the significance of motherhood varies across cultures, it is, as this book argues, connected not just to gender and sexuality, but also to religion and nationality. Reproduction is central to the flourishing of any nation or culture, and therefore motherhood is a major signifier of women's relationship to the state. This is so much the case that states enact laws about which women can bear children and have supported sterilization efforts in cases where women are not deemed appropriate bearers of the nation. States also legislate reproductive technologies, adoption, and government support for parenting.
By considering representations and narratives of maternity, this volume shows how practices of global politics shape and are shaped by the gendered norms and institutions that underpin motherhood. Motherhood matters in global politics. Yet, the diverse ways in which performances and practices of motherhood are constituted by and are constitutive of other dimensions of political life are frequently obscured, or assumed to be of little interest to scholars, policymakers, and practitioners.
Featuring innovative and diverse chapters on the politics of motherhood as an institution, this collection shows that maternality is troubled, complicated, and heterogeneous in global politics. Thus, performances and practices of motherhood warrant closer and more sustained scrutiny. This book builds on work by feminist international relations scholars, extending into disruptive spaces of queer theory, literary critique, and post-colonial studies. The chapters in this book consider the meaning of motherhood, particularly during times of war versus peace; the connections between motherhood and nationhood (and reproduction of the state); and care work and maternal labor, particularly as performed by transnational workers. Ultimately, this book demonstrates the complex interconnections between the individual, the state, and the global through the lens of maternality.
Contents
1. Motherhood and Maternality in Global Politics
Anna L. Weissman and Lucy B. Hall
Performances
2. A Mother's Violence in Global Politics: An Interrogation of Violent Femininity and Motherhood Narratives
Katerina Krulisova
3. Protestant paramilitary mothering: Mothers and daughters in the Northern Irish Troubles
Sandra McEvoy
4. Stigmatized acts of motherhood
Jamie J. Hagen
5. Logics of Protection and the Discursive Construction of Refugee Fathers
Lucy B. Hall
State
6. Bearing Peace and War: Sex, Motherhood, and the Treaty of the Pyrenees
Laura Sjoberg
7. Ideal Citizens and Family Values: The Politics of Reproductive Fitness
Anna L. Weissman
8. Mother Knows Best? Critical Maternal Ethics and the Rape Clause
Rebecca Wilson
9. Queering Reproductive Aid
Corinne Mason
10. Troubling Conceptions of Motherhood: State Feminism and Political Agency of Women in the Global South
Anwar Mhajne and Crystal Whetstone
Labour
11. Feminist Politics Still Needs Motherhood
Amanda Watson
12. Privatised Bodies in Public Locations: C-Sections, Toddler Meltdowns and the Neoliberal Gaze
Penny Griffin
13. Raising children in strangeness: cosmopolitan mothering and domestic helpers in expatriate families
Catherine Goetze
14. Celebrity global motherhood: Maternal care and cosmopolitan obligation
Annika Bergman Rosamond
15. Earthborn: Maternity and Natality on a Hurting Planet
Cara Daggett
16. Speaking from the Margins of Motherhood: A Politics (M)otherwise
Sara C. Motta