Motherhood Reconceived: Feminism and the Legacies of the Sixties / Edition 1

Motherhood Reconceived: Feminism and the Legacies of the Sixties / Edition 1

by Lauri Umansky
ISBN-10:
081478562X
ISBN-13:
9780814785621
Pub. Date:
08/01/1996
Publisher:
New York University Press
ISBN-10:
081478562X
ISBN-13:
9780814785621
Pub. Date:
08/01/1996
Publisher:
New York University Press
Motherhood Reconceived: Feminism and the Legacies of the Sixties / Edition 1

Motherhood Reconceived: Feminism and the Legacies of the Sixties / Edition 1

by Lauri Umansky

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Overview

From the early days of second-wave feminism, motherhood and the quest for women's liberation have been inextricably linked. And yet motherhood has at times been viewed, by anti-feminists and select feminists alike, as somehow at odds with feminism. In reality, feminists have long treated motherhood as an organizing metaphor for women's needs and advancement. The mother has been regarded with suspicion at times, deified at others, but never ignored.The first book devoted to this complex relationship, Motherhood Reconceived examines in depth how the realities of motherhood have influenced feminist thought. Bringing to life the work of a variety of feminist writers and theorists, among them Jane Alpert, Mary Daly, Susan Griffin, Adrienne Rich, and Dorothy Dinnerstein, Umansky situates feminist discourses of motherhood within the social and political contexts of the 1960s. Charting an increasingly favorable view of motherhood among feminists from the late 1960s through the 1980s, Umansky reveals how African American feminists sought to redefine black nationalist discourses of motherhood, a reworking subsequently adopted by white radical and socialist feminists seeking to broaden the racial base of their movement.
Noting the cultural left's conflicted relationship to feminism, that is, the concurrent demand for individual sexual liberation and the desire for community, Umansky traces that legacy through various stages of feminist concern about motherhood: early critiques of the nuclear family, tempered by strong support for day care; an endorsement of natural childbirth by the women's health movement of the early 1970s; white feminists' attempt to forge a multiracial movement by declaring motherhood a universal bond; and the emergence of psychoanalytic feminism, ecofeminism, spiritual feminism, and the feminist anti- pornography movement.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814785621
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/01/1996
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

Lauri Umansky is Professor of History at Suffolk University and is the author of The New Disability History: American Perspectives and ""Bad Mother: The Politics of Blame in the Twentieth Century America.

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From the Publisher

"An extremely thoughtful history ... The book is entirely convincing in its exploration of what feminism in the United States has been doing with the issue of motherhood."

-The Journal of American History

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