« C’est un peu comme être en train de se noyer » : Attentes et expériences de la maternité durant la pandémie de COVID-19

Auteurs-es

  • May Friedman Ryerson University School of Social Work
  • Kori Kostka Lichtfuss Ontario Tech University, Community, Population and Public Health Program
  • Lucas Martignetti Ontario Tech University, Community, Public and Population Health Program
  • Jacqui Gingras Department of Sociology, Ryerson University

Mots-clés :

maternité, COVID, féminisme matricentrique, rôles genrés, pandémie

Résumé

Quel est l’impact de l’introduction de conditions de maternité irréalistes et accablantes dans le contexte d’une pandémie mondiale? Cet article vise à explorer l’impact des attentes et des expériences maternelles à l’époque de la COVID-19. À travers les récits à la première personne de quatre-vingts mères s’identifiant comme telles et qui ont assumé leur rôle parental tout au long de la pandémie de COVID, nous souhaitons explorer le mythe de la bonne mère, les sentiments d’échec et les libertés paradoxales qui surgissent en temps de pandémie.

Statistiques

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Bibliographies de l'auteur-e

May Friedman, Ryerson University School of Social Work

May Friedman is a faculty member in the Ryerson School of Social Work and in the Ryerson/York graduate program in Communication and Culture. Most recently, much of May’s research has focused on intersectional approaches to fat studies considering the multiple and fluid experiences of both fat oppression and fat activism. The bulk of May’s work focuses on unstable identities, including bodies that do not conform to traditional racial and national or aesthetic lines.

Kori Kostka Lichtfuss, Ontario Tech University, Community, Population and Public Health Program

Kori Kostka Lichtfuss is a Registered Dietitian and is currently completing her MHSc at Ontario Tech University in the Community, Population and Public Health Program.

Lucas Martignetti, Ontario Tech University, Community, Public and Population Health Program

Lucas Martignetti is a Master of Health Sciences student in Ontario Tech University's Community, Public and Population Health Program. His research focuses on health equity, and his thesis examines barriers and facilitators to equitable access to naloxone in Durham Region, Ontario, Canada.

Jacqui Gingras, Department of Sociology, Ryerson University

Jacqui Gingras is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Ryerson University in Toronto. Her research explores social health movements, fat studies, radical democratic pedagogies, and decolonization of health professions within the entanglements of colonial neoliberal economics and intersectional feminisms. She has published in the Fat Studies Journal, Journal of Sociology, and Critical Public Health. She is the founding editor of the Journal of Critical Dietetics, an open-access, peer-reviewed journal at http://criticaldietetics.ryerson.ca.

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Publié-e

2021-05-04