Description:
Parenting, single motherhood and the breakdown of the family are all subjects of current political and social debate in the West, and there is little agreement among cultural commentators on what mothers should be, what children need, and how those needs conflict with the needs of the parents.
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The contributors to Mothering and Ambivalence address these issues but counter the reluctance of current feminist literature to embrace psychoanalytic understandings of dependency, identity and anxiety. Drawing on professional experience, they use psychoanalysis to go beyond the often simplistic claims of the political debate on mothering. In their discussions of parenting and gender relations within families, the authors also surmount the narrowness of purely feminist polemics, keeping in view the importance of the diverse identities for women who become mothers.
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Returnable at the third party seller's discretion and may come without consumable supplements like access codes, CD's, or workbooks.
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