{"title":"\"我们是贝壳妈妈","authors":"Mar Sánchez Fernández","doi":"10.14811/clr.v46.827","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article sustains that children’s literature has the potential to legitimise and subvert dominant motherhood ideologies. Drawing on feminist motherhood theory in the fields of gender studies and children’s literature, this article critically analyses the influence of New Momism in Jacqueline Wilson’s Tracy Beaker series (1991–2019), contributing to a body of research on these acclaimed books for children. New Momism is an ideological movement which romanticises motherhood and sets highly demanding, impossible-to-meet standards of motherhood (Douglas and Adams 4). New Momist ideology resulted in a series of mother stereotypes advanced by the media, such as the “celebrity mum”, the “welfare mother” and the “supermum”. Mother characters in the Tracy Beaker novels are analysed against these stereotypes to ascertain to what extent their existence is supported or disavowed. This article is divided into two sections that coincide with the two sequences of the series. The first focuses on the two main mother characters: Carly, Tracy’s biological mother, and Cam, Tracy’s foster mother. The second part focuses on the character of Tracy as a mother and how her socio-economic background affects her experience of mothering. The presence of mother stereotypes such as the celebrity mum and the welfare mother demonstrate how New Momist ideas are embedded in the text. However, these patriarchal ideas of motherhood are also undermined in the novels, most notably through the challenge of mother stereotypes, the dismissal of the mother ideal and the portrayal of diverse motherhood experiences. Finally, an evolution in the treatment of motherhood throughout the years can be observed in the series, with the most recent novels presenting a more progressive perspective on working-class motherhood and female sexuality.","PeriodicalId":52259,"journal":{"name":"Barnboken","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"“We Are the Beaker Mums”\",\"authors\":\"Mar Sánchez Fernández\",\"doi\":\"10.14811/clr.v46.827\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This article sustains that children’s literature has the potential to legitimise and subvert dominant motherhood ideologies. Drawing on feminist motherhood theory in the fields of gender studies and children’s literature, this article critically analyses the influence of New Momism in Jacqueline Wilson’s Tracy Beaker series (1991–2019), contributing to a body of research on these acclaimed books for children. New Momism is an ideological movement which romanticises motherhood and sets highly demanding, impossible-to-meet standards of motherhood (Douglas and Adams 4). New Momist ideology resulted in a series of mother stereotypes advanced by the media, such as the “celebrity mum”, the “welfare mother” and the “supermum”. Mother characters in the Tracy Beaker novels are analysed against these stereotypes to ascertain to what extent their existence is supported or disavowed. This article is divided into two sections that coincide with the two sequences of the series. The first focuses on the two main mother characters: Carly, Tracy’s biological mother, and Cam, Tracy’s foster mother. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文认为,儿童文学具有合法化和颠覆主流母性意识形态的潜力。本文借鉴性别研究和儿童文学领域的女性主义母性理论,批判性地分析了新母亲主义对杰奎琳·威尔逊的《特雷西·烧杯》系列(1991-2019)的影响,为这些备受赞誉的儿童书籍的研究做出了贡献。新妈妈主义是一种将母性浪漫化,并为母性设定高要求、不可能达到的标准的意识形态运动(Douglas and Adams 4)。新妈妈主义的意识形态导致了媒体对母亲的一系列刻板印象,如“名人妈妈”、“福利妈妈”和“超级妈妈”。特雷西·比克小说中的母亲角色被分析与这些刻板印象相对照,以确定她们的存在在多大程度上得到支持或否定。本文分为与该系列的两个序列相一致的两个部分。第一个集中在两个主要的母亲角色:卡莉,特蕾西的生母和卡姆,特蕾西的养母。第二部分关注特雷西作为母亲的性格以及她的社会经济背景如何影响她的育儿经历。名人妈妈和福利妈妈等母亲刻板印象的存在表明,新母亲主义思想是如何嵌入文本的。然而,这些父权制的母性观念在小说中也被削弱了,最明显的是通过对母亲刻板印象的挑战,对母亲理想的摒弃和对多样化母亲经历的描绘。最后,在这个系列中,我们可以观察到多年来对母性的处理方式的演变,最近的小说对工人阶级的母性和女性性行为提出了更进步的观点。
This article sustains that children’s literature has the potential to legitimise and subvert dominant motherhood ideologies. Drawing on feminist motherhood theory in the fields of gender studies and children’s literature, this article critically analyses the influence of New Momism in Jacqueline Wilson’s Tracy Beaker series (1991–2019), contributing to a body of research on these acclaimed books for children. New Momism is an ideological movement which romanticises motherhood and sets highly demanding, impossible-to-meet standards of motherhood (Douglas and Adams 4). New Momist ideology resulted in a series of mother stereotypes advanced by the media, such as the “celebrity mum”, the “welfare mother” and the “supermum”. Mother characters in the Tracy Beaker novels are analysed against these stereotypes to ascertain to what extent their existence is supported or disavowed. This article is divided into two sections that coincide with the two sequences of the series. The first focuses on the two main mother characters: Carly, Tracy’s biological mother, and Cam, Tracy’s foster mother. The second part focuses on the character of Tracy as a mother and how her socio-economic background affects her experience of mothering. The presence of mother stereotypes such as the celebrity mum and the welfare mother demonstrate how New Momist ideas are embedded in the text. However, these patriarchal ideas of motherhood are also undermined in the novels, most notably through the challenge of mother stereotypes, the dismissal of the mother ideal and the portrayal of diverse motherhood experiences. Finally, an evolution in the treatment of motherhood throughout the years can be observed in the series, with the most recent novels presenting a more progressive perspective on working-class motherhood and female sexuality.