Sharing a home, but not a family: The unspoken stories of cohabiting with divorced partners and their children

IF 3.2 1区 社会学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Linna Sai, Grace Gao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper reflects on the experiences of two women cohabiting with heterosexual partners who have children from previous marriages. Using duoethnography, we explore the challenges and possibilities of sustaining relationships and managing shared spaces in these complex family structures. Through a queer theoretical lens, we examine how non‐traditional family arrangements disrupt conventional gender roles and challenge nuclear family ideals. Unlike formalized stepfamily roles, cohabiting women occupy ambiguous positions, resisting societal caregiving expectations and rigid stepparent identities—dynamics that influence their personal and professional lives. Our findings contribute to stepfamily literature by centering the perspectives of cohabiting women, revealing how their roles remain fluid and continuously negotiated rather than predetermined. In doing so, we challenge the assumption that women in stepfamilies must inevitably adopt maternal roles. Ultimately, we advocate for broader recognition of diverse family forms and for social and organizational policies that better accommodate the complexities of contemporary relational arrangements.
共享一个家,但不是一个家庭:与离婚伴侣和他们的孩子同居的未说出口的故事
这篇论文反映了两名女性与异性伴侣同居的经历,这些伴侣都有以前婚姻的孩子。利用多元民族志,我们探索在这些复杂的家庭结构中维持关系和管理共享空间的挑战和可能性。通过酷儿理论的镜头,我们研究非传统的家庭安排如何破坏传统的性别角色和挑战核心家庭的理想。与正式的继家庭角色不同,同居女性占据着模棱两可的地位,抵制社会对照顾的期望和严格的继父母身份——这些因素影响着她们的个人和职业生活。我们的研究结果以同居女性的视角为中心,揭示了她们的角色是如何保持流动性和不断协商而不是预先确定的,从而为继家庭文学做出了贡献。在这样做的过程中,我们挑战了继家庭中的女性必须不可避免地扮演母亲角色的假设。最后,我们主张更广泛地承认各种不同的家庭形式,并主张更好地适应当代关系安排的复杂性的社会和组织政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
42
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