“We Are the Beaker Mums”

Theme: Motherhood and Mothering. Ill. ©Stina Wirsén 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 criti...

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Main Author: Mar Sánchez Fernández
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Svenska Barnboksinstitutet 2023-12-01
Series:Barnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/827
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author Mar Sánchez Fernández
author_facet Mar Sánchez Fernández
author_sort Mar Sánchez Fernández
collection DOAJ
description Theme: Motherhood and Mothering. Ill. ©Stina Wirsén 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.  
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spelling doaj.art-077e6321af7942dba2b3c93accc1d0d32024-03-15T09:05:42ZdanSvenska BarnboksinstitutetBarnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning0347-772X2000-43892023-12-014610.14811/clr.v46.827“We Are the Beaker Mums” Mar Sánchez Fernández Theme: Motherhood and Mothering. Ill. ©Stina Wirsén 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.   https://barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/827social realismfeminist theorymotherhood theorynew momismmotherhood ideologyJacqueline Wilson
spellingShingle Mar Sánchez Fernández
“We Are the Beaker Mums”
Barnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning
social realism
feminist theory
motherhood theory
new momism
motherhood ideology
Jacqueline Wilson
title “We Are the Beaker Mums”
title_full “We Are the Beaker Mums”
title_fullStr “We Are the Beaker Mums”
title_full_unstemmed “We Are the Beaker Mums”
title_short “We Are the Beaker Mums”
title_sort we are the beaker mums
topic social realism
feminist theory
motherhood theory
new momism
motherhood ideology
Jacqueline Wilson
url https://barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/827
work_keys_str_mv AT marsanchezfernandez wearethebeakermums