Title of article
Negotiating mothering against the odds: Gastrostomy tube feeding, stigma, governmentality and disabled children
Author/Authors
Gillian M. Craig، نويسنده , , Graham Scambler، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
11
From page
1115
To page
1125
Abstract
Using the findings of a small-scale qualitative investigation based on in-depth interviews with mothers attending a tertiary paediatric referral centre in London, this paper explores professional and parental discourses in relation to gastrostomy tube feeding and disabled children. Detailed accounts are given of womenʹs struggles to negotiate their identities, and those of their children, within dominant discourses of mothering and child-centredness. Constructions of feeding practices as coercive conflict with normative expectations of ‘good mothering’ and the ‘idealised autonomous’ child. Although notions of ‘stigmatised identities’ featured in womenʹs accounts of feeding children, both orally and by tube, stigma fails to explain why mothers are rendered culpable within expert discourses. Prevailing theories of stigma and coping are interrogated and judged to be more descriptive than explanatory. Felt stigma is posited as an aspect of governmentality.
Keywords
Gastrostomy feeding tubes , Disability , Mothering , stigma , Feminist-post-structuralism , Governmentality
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
602733
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