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Full Description
Mothers have consistently relied upon one another for guidance and support as they navigate the difficult world of parenting. For many women, the increasingly established online community of "mommyblogs" now provides a source of camaraderie and support that acknowledges both the work of mothering and the implications of its undertaking. Beyond their capacity to entertain, how have mommyblogs shifted our understanding of twenty-first-century motherhood?
In examining the content of hundreds of mommyblogs, May Friedman considers the ways that online maternal life writing provides a front row seat to some of the most raw, offbeat, and engaging portraits of motherhood imaginable. Focusing on the composition of the "mamasphere" and on mommyblogs' emphasis on connection, Friedman reveals the changing face of contemporary motherhood - one less concerned with the proscriptions of what good mothers should do, and more invested in what diverse mothers have to say.
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
The Emergence of Networked Communication and the Birth of Blogs
Mommyblogs: The Term
Why Do Mothers Blog?
What Mommyblogs Offer: The Theoretical Frameworks
Limitations of the Genre: The Digital Divide
Authenticity: Do Mommyblogs Tell the Truth?
About This Book
Chapter 2: A Short History of the Mamasphere and the Discursive Construction of Motherhood
How Blogging Happens
Creation of the Mamasphere
How Do We Read Mommyblogs?
Life Writing Theory: The "Self-in-the-Writing"
Chapter 3: On Hybridity: The Diversity and Multiplicity of the Mamasphere
Motherhood from the Margins: The Need for Diverse Motherhood Stories
Transnationalism and Hybridity: Gaza Mom
Mainstream Black motherhood: The Young Mommy Life
Motherhood and Ethnicity: Devis with Babies
Mothering and Power: The Dominatrix Next Door
Anonymity: The Renegade Rebbetzin
Gender and Normativity: Transgender Mom and Unwellness
Contradictory and Convergent Motherhoods: Fannfare and Friday Playdate
Hybridity and Advocacy: Dream Mom and Live from the Wang of America
Interrupting Good Motherhood: Peter's Cross Station and Any Mommy Out There?
Writing from the Centre: Starbloggers and Hybridity
Why Does Hybridity Matter? What Does Hybridity Offer?
Chapter 4: On the Cyborg: Dialogism, and Collective Stories
The Cyborg Mother Relationality
"Whuffie": Popular Mommybloggers On Temporality
The Multidimensional Cyborg: The Mamasphere's Collective Mother
Chapter 5: On Queer: A Liminal and Unfixed Motherhood
History of Queer Theory
Illuminating the Queer Mother
Changing the Subject: Destabilizing Individuality
From "Mother" to "Mothering"
Queering the Kids: Mommyblogging and Privacy
Making the Queer Shift
Chapter 6: Conclusions
Precariousness of the Medium
Monetization and a Changing Voice
Moving Forward
Appendix A: List of blogs selected for primary research
References



