所以,你认为你可以做父母:推特用户对电视单身父母中单身父亲奖杯的回应

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Men and Masculinities Pub Date : 2023-02-02 DOI:10.1177/1097184X231155893
L. Bernabo, J. Turchi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着美国单身父亲人口的扩大,我们探讨了《单亲父母》(ABC,2018-2020)的粉丝们对其三个单身父亲角色的反应,每个角色都唤起了不同的比喻。观众使用推特参与电视节目,因此他们的推特可以洞察社会对不断演变的性别育儿规范的期望。使用定性内容分析,我们分析了观众的推文(N=834),并探讨了观众如何处理这些角色与孩子、单身父母和浪漫伴侣的关系。粉丝们庆祝千禧一代对父亲身份的新态度,并挑战“无能父亲”的传统比喻,但希望单身父亲能重新结婚,从而不再是单身父母。我们得出的结论是,单亲粉丝接受了现代、不断扩大的父亲和照顾的文化规范,同时最终表现出对双亲家庭的偏好。
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So, You Think You Can Parent: Twitter Users’ Responses to Single Father Tropes in Television’s Single Parents
As the U.S. single-father population expands, we explore how fans of Single Parents (ABC, 2018–2020) responded to its three single-father characters, each of whom evoke a distinct trope. Viewers use Twitter to engage television programs, and so their tweets provide insight into societal expectations surrounding evolving gendered parenting norms. Using qualitative content analysis, we analyze viewers’ tweets (N = 834) and explore the ways viewers addressed these characters’ relationships with children, with their fellow single parents, and with romantic partners. Fans celebrated the new millennial approach to fatherhood and challenged the traditional trope of “inept father,” yet hoped the single fathers would re-couple and therefore cease to be single parents. We conclude that Single Parents fans embraced modern, expanding cultural norms for fathers and caregiving while ultimately demonstrating a preference for two-parent households.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Men and Masculinities presents peer-reviewed empirical and theoretical scholarship grounded in the most current theoretical perspectives within gender studies, including feminism, queer theory and multiculturalism. Using diverse methodologies, Men and Masculinities"s articles explore the evolving roles and perceptions of men across society. Complementing existing publications on women"s studies and gay and lesbian studies, Men and Masculinities helps complete the spectrum of research on gender. The journal gives scholars interested in gender vital, balanced information on the burgeoning - and often misunderstood - field of masculinities studies.
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