2022
DOI: 10.1007/s12147-022-09295-w
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Mothering in a Pandemic: Navigating Care Work, Intensive Motherhood, and COVID-19

Abstract: Even before COVID-19, women around the world performed more unpaid domestic labor, specifically unpaid care labor, than men. COVID-19 has only exacerbated the gender gap in this domestic labor. For Western women, especially mothers in the United States of America, the normative discourse of intensive motherhood and the gendered pressure inherent in the unrealistic standards set by the discourse have only increased the amount of unpaid domestic and care labor required of mothers. Using qualitative, in-depth int… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1
1

Citation Types

0
13
0
3

Year Published

2023
2023
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
2

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 23 publications
(16 citation statements)
references
References 44 publications
0
13
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…However, it remains necessary to investigate the pandemic's long-term implications for the personal, family, and social lives of women. This study has shown how COVID-19 has not only returned women to their homes (Cummins & Brannon, 2022), but also "forced" them to be wholly responsible for domestic duties that had previously been shared or abandoned. This, in turn, has justified the unequal division of labor within the household, wherein men are tasked with public duties while women handle all domestic labor.…”
Section: Cultural Reproduction Of Gender Inequalitymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…However, it remains necessary to investigate the pandemic's long-term implications for the personal, family, and social lives of women. This study has shown how COVID-19 has not only returned women to their homes (Cummins & Brannon, 2022), but also "forced" them to be wholly responsible for domestic duties that had previously been shared or abandoned. This, in turn, has justified the unequal division of labor within the household, wherein men are tasked with public duties while women handle all domestic labor.…”
Section: Cultural Reproduction Of Gender Inequalitymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…While some have revealed the positive aspects of the pandemic for middle- and upper-class mothers Somogyi et al ( 2022 ), most feminist research on pandemic mothering has highlighted how gender inequities were exacerbated during this period, negatively impacting women's health and wellbeing. Various scholars have taken up and extended the concept of intensive motherhood to understand how pre-existing demands on mothers' time and energy were further amplified, or ‘intensified', during the pandemic as many mothers carried the majority of childcare during lockdowns, often while also managing their jobs and other community and family care work (Cummins and Brannon, 2022 ; Limonic, 2023 ). Prior to the pandemic, many mothers felt the burden of “unrealistic and overwhelming conditions of motherhood”, but during COVID-19 many mothers experienced increased feelings of failure amidst “good” mother myths in the context of the “paradoxical freedoms” under pandemic time (Friedman et al, 2021 , p. 47).…”
Section: Literature and Conceptual Framingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Initiatives such as health management, setting up digital communication systems at home and mental health breaks were popular during the lockdown in work-from-home (WFH) situations (Bick et al ., 2021; Boiral, 2021; Goyal and Dangwal, 2022). However, the extant literature argues that for working mothers, the WFH dynamics were more stressful and challenging during the pandemic as they had to manage more than their other colleagues who were either single or were fathers with minimum household responsibilities (Cummins and Brannon, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From a working mother's lens, COVID-19 and domestic work only decreased their productivity and increased their work-life conflict (Collins, 2019; Collins et al ., 2021). A large amount of literature published between 2020 and 2022 highlighted that, across sectors, working mothers faced distress: managing care, domestic labor and WFH schedules all by themselves (Whiley et al ., 2021; Cummins and Brannon, 2022; Guatimosim, 2020). A few studies done in 2021 and 2022 also observed that at the onset of the crisis, the home space shifted back to traditional gender roles (Güney-Frahm, 2020; Collin et al ., 2021; Rania, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation