4 research outputs found

    “Surveilling the Maternal Body”: A Critical Examination through Foucault’s Panopticon

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    This article analyzes my personal experience of having a maternal body through autoethnographic means. Being pregnant is a time of celebration, but moms experience private and public changes in their bodies. These public changes continue during the postpartum period. Ground in Foucault’s panopticon, this paper explores how the maternal body undergoes self-surveillance as well as surveillance by the proverbial others. I provide vignettes and personal experiences to highlight the panopticon: moms self-surveil but moms are also being surveilled when in the public eye. I make the argument of how the maternal body is a site of surveillance often used to judge the goodness of the mother or the usefulness of the maternal body. I conclude with a suggestion of how the panopticon can be used to examine parenting practices

    Mother, father, husband, wife, soldier : identity-negotiation of veterans during re-entry into family life post-deployment

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    Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on July 31, 2013).The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file.Dissertation advisor: Dr. Loreen N. OlsonIncludes bibliographical references.Vita.Ph. D. University of Missouri--Columbia 2012."July 2012"[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] The purposes of this study were to (a) understand how recent military veterans negotiate their identities post-deployment, and more specifically, (b) understand how military veterans' identity negotiation impacts communication with partners and their children after war-time deployment. The current study interviewed 22 recent veterans. Using Hecht, Jackson, and Ribeau's (2003) Communication Theory of Identity (CTI) as a theoretical lens, the results revealed that participants experience the penetration of the personal, relational, and communal layers as defined by CTI. Specifically, participants had the urge to negotiate their identity post-deployment at the personal layer, fighting to go back to the person that they were before they deployed. However, as they negotiated between work and family identities, the personal layer negotiation began to interpenetrate with the communal layers as they worked to balance their work and family selves post-deployment. Then, participants learned that their work and family identities intrapenetrated within the communal layer. Next, participants' communication was affected within the relational layer as they negotiated their relational identities with their spouse and their children. Participants experienced topic avoidance, jealousy, and role negotiation with their spouse and identity gaps with their children.Includes bibliographical reference

    Mommy in Waiting

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