"这让我觉得自己是个糟糕的父母":对大流行病母亲教育的跨部门分析

Holly Thorpe, Nikki Barrett, M. Nemani, Grace O’Leary, Nida Ahmad
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摘要

COVID-19 大流行凸显了母亲们面临的日常和特殊挑战。然而,在这一长期的风险、混乱和不确定性时期,研究或社会评论很少承认母亲身份的多重性。本文通过对大流行期间生活在新西兰奥特亚罗瓦的 24 位母亲的访谈,其中包括在封锁期间怀孕和分娩的妇女、未成年母亲、单身母亲、低收入母亲和职业母亲。样本有意多样化,包括毛利母亲、太平洋裔母亲、亚裔母亲和移民母亲。本文从母性和妇女健康的交叉视角出发,借鉴并扩展了女权主义关于大流行病期间母亲经历的研究,突出强调了不同社会、文化和经济地位的母亲以及在母亲的不同阶段所面临的许多不同挑战。在所有样本中,我们揭示了母亲们所遭受的巨大情感伤害,尤其是在封锁期和持续的社会限制下,关键的社会、医疗和健康支持系统的缺失。许多妇女描述了大流行病如何影响她们对母亲身份的感受,促使她们对自己与家庭、家人、工作和更广泛的社会之间的关系进行新的反思。尽管有一些相似之处,但各种形式的孤立、评判和歧视进一步加剧了毛利母亲、太平洋裔母亲、移民母亲和单身母亲的大流行经历。通过这种方式,大流行病揭示了孕产妇日常生活的性别化问题,同时也揭示了需要制定更多跨文化和促进性别平等的政策,承认母亲生活的多层次复杂性。
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“It made me feel like a shit parent”: an intersectional analysis of pandemic mothering
The COVID-19 pandemic brought to the fore the everyday and exceptional challenges for mothers. Rarely, however, did research or social commentary acknowledge the multiplicities of motherhood during this prolonged period of risk, disruption, and uncertainty. This paper draws upon interviews with 24 mothers living in Aotearoa New Zealand during the pandemic, including women who were pregnant and gave birth during lockdowns, teenage mothers, single and low-income mothers, and working mothers. The sample was intentionally diverse, including Māori, Pacific, Asian and migrant mothers. Engaging an intersectional lens on motherhood and women's health, this paper builds upon and extends feminist research on mothers' experiences during the pandemic, highlighting the many different challenges facing mothers of diverse social, cultural, and economic positionalities and during various stages of motherhood. Across the sample, we reveal the significant emotional toll on mothers, particularly with the absence of critical social, medical and health support systems during lockdown periods and sustained social restrictions. Many of the women described how the pandemic affected their feelings about motherhood, prompting new reflections on their relationships with the home, family, work, and broader society. Despite some similarities, the pandemic experiences of Māori, Pacific, migrant and single mothers were further intensified by various forms of isolation, judgement, and discrimination. In this way, the pandemic shed light on the gendering of everyday maternal life, but also the need for more intersectional culturally and gender-responsive policies that acknowledge the multi-layered complexities of mothers' lives.
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