父亲的身体":回顾初为人父对就业男性的身体影响

IF 7.5 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS International Journal of Management Reviews Pub Date : 2024-08-08 DOI:10.1111/ijmr.12377
Caroline Gatrell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本综述提出了一个新概念--"父亲的身体",以阐明初为人父对就业男性的身体影响。它探讨了有关父亲身份、就业和健康的文献,揭示了父亲如何经历怀孕、分娩和婴儿护理(这里的婴儿指两岁以下)。与有关母亲(怀孕和分娩后)身体的成熟概念不同,管理研究中没有类似的概念来促进对近期父亲身份、身体和就业的理解。所提出的 "父亲的身体 "概念正是为了解决这一问题,它提供了一个战略平台,用于从理论上探讨父亲身份如何影响男性在平衡父亲身份与有偿工作之间的生活和身体体验。本文从社会学和健康文献的跨学科视角出发,回顾了在新自由主义(市场导向型)经济体(以美国和英国为典型)就业背景下有关父亲身体的研究。它指出了对父亲健康和就业构成风险的相关重要健康症状(如睡眠不足)。然而,综述显示,准父亲/新手父亲在工作中如何受到压力,以符合霸权男性的神话形象,这就要求他们表现出强烈的工作导向,否认健康状况不佳,并长时间离家工作。本文创造了 "缺席的战士 "这一术语,来表达这种 "男子汉 "父亲(战士)的幻觉,即他不在家照顾婴儿,但身体却在工作:他应该否认父性身体的物质性。建议通过生活中的 "父亲身体 "概念,进一步探讨父亲的身体健康需求。
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The ‘Paternal body’: Reviewing the corporeal impact of new fatherhood on employed men
This review proposes a new concept, the ‘Paternal body’, to illuminate the corporeal impact, on employed men, of new fatherhood. It explores literatures on fatherhood, employment and health to reveal how fathers experience pregnancy, birth and infant‐care (infancy defined, here, as up to age two). In contrast to well‐established notions regarding Maternal (pregnant and post‐birth) bodies, there exists within management studies no similar concept to facilitate understanding of recent fatherhood, the body and employment. The proposed concept ‘Paternal body’ addresses this lack, offering a strategic platform for theorizing how fatherhood impacts men's lived, bodily experience of balancing paternity with paid work. Drawing upon interdisciplinary perspectives from sociology and health literatures, the paper reviews research on paternal corporeality in the context of employment in neo‐liberal (market‐oriented) economies (typified by the USA and UK). It identifies related and important health symptoms (such as sleep deprivation) that pose risks to paternal health and employment. Yet the review shows how expectant/recent fathers are pressured, at work, to live up to a mythical image of hegemonic masculinity that requires them to display strong work‐orientation, denying ill‐health and working long hours away from home. The paper coins the term: ‘Absent warrior’ to represent this illusion of a ‘manly’ father (warrior) who is absent from infant‐care and from his home, but bodily present at work: a father who is supposed to deny the materiality of inhabiting a Paternal body. Recommendations are made for further exploration of fathers’ embodied health needs through the concept of the lived ‘Paternal body’.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Management Reviews (IJMR) stands as the premier global review journal in Organisation and Management Studies (OMS). Its published papers aim to provide substantial conceptual contributions, acting as a strategic platform for new research directions. IJMR plays a pivotal role in influencing how OMS scholars conceptualize research in their respective fields. The journal's reviews critically assess the state of knowledge in specific fields, appraising the conceptual foundations of competing paradigms to advance current and future research in the area.
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