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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

How Genes and the Environment Shape what Mothers Say, Think, and Do

Mileva, Viara 18 December 2012 (has links)
Human maternal responsiveness is a complex repertoire of infant-related behaviours and attitudes, which vary between and within mothers. Environmental and socioeconomic factors undoubtedly influence maternal care, but less is known about how genetic variation associates with maternal responsiveness. Where genetic variation has been examined in relation to mothering, the moderating effects of early life experiences in the mother have not been explored. Additionally, studies tend to focus on maternal sensitivity, neglecting to explore other dimensions of maternal responsiveness. The purpose of the present thesis was to explore genetic variation in three gene families – dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and oxytocin (OXT) – in relation to differences in maternal care in a Caucasian sample of new mothers recruited in early pregnancy from Hamilton, Ontario (N=187). Furthermore, interactions between early experiences in the mothers’ lives and their genetic polymorphic variants were examined. Early experience was a combined measure of the Parental Bonding Instrument and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Maternal behaviour during mother-infant interaction was assessed at 6 months postpartum and derived from a video-recorded 30-minute mother-infant interaction. The behavioural outcomes of interest maternal sensitivity (assessed using the Ainsworth Maternal Care Scales) and maternal behaviors (vocalizing, orienting away from infant, instrumental caregiving). We also assessed maternal attitudes about parenting the infant at 6 months postpartum. Multiple polymorphisms on DA receptors D1 (rs686, rs4532, rs265981, rs265976, rs5326) and D2 (rs6277, rs1799732, rs1799978, rs1800497) associated with maternal vocalizing and orienting away from the infant, respectively. The OXT polymorphisms rs2740210 and rs4813627 associated with infant-directed vocalizing. A major polymorphism on the 5-HT transporter (5HTTLPR and a related rs25531 polymorphism) associated significantly with maternal sensitivity. There were gene-environment interactions between this 5-HT polymorphism and early adversity in association with maternal orienting away and maternal attitudes. Gene-environment interactions were also found between the OXT polymorphisms rs2740210 and rs4813627 and instrumental care of the infant. These results suggest that variations in genes encoding major brain neurotransmitters and neurohormones are related to observed maternal behaviour and self-reported maternal attitudes. These results showcase the importance of exploring multiple dimensions of complex behavioural phenotypes like mothering.
22

How Genes and the Environment Shape what Mothers Say, Think, and Do

Mileva, Viara 18 December 2012 (has links)
Human maternal responsiveness is a complex repertoire of infant-related behaviours and attitudes, which vary between and within mothers. Environmental and socioeconomic factors undoubtedly influence maternal care, but less is known about how genetic variation associates with maternal responsiveness. Where genetic variation has been examined in relation to mothering, the moderating effects of early life experiences in the mother have not been explored. Additionally, studies tend to focus on maternal sensitivity, neglecting to explore other dimensions of maternal responsiveness. The purpose of the present thesis was to explore genetic variation in three gene families – dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and oxytocin (OXT) – in relation to differences in maternal care in a Caucasian sample of new mothers recruited in early pregnancy from Hamilton, Ontario (N=187). Furthermore, interactions between early experiences in the mothers’ lives and their genetic polymorphic variants were examined. Early experience was a combined measure of the Parental Bonding Instrument and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Maternal behaviour during mother-infant interaction was assessed at 6 months postpartum and derived from a video-recorded 30-minute mother-infant interaction. The behavioural outcomes of interest maternal sensitivity (assessed using the Ainsworth Maternal Care Scales) and maternal behaviors (vocalizing, orienting away from infant, instrumental caregiving). We also assessed maternal attitudes about parenting the infant at 6 months postpartum. Multiple polymorphisms on DA receptors D1 (rs686, rs4532, rs265981, rs265976, rs5326) and D2 (rs6277, rs1799732, rs1799978, rs1800497) associated with maternal vocalizing and orienting away from the infant, respectively. The OXT polymorphisms rs2740210 and rs4813627 associated with infant-directed vocalizing. A major polymorphism on the 5-HT transporter (5HTTLPR and a related rs25531 polymorphism) associated significantly with maternal sensitivity. There were gene-environment interactions between this 5-HT polymorphism and early adversity in association with maternal orienting away and maternal attitudes. Gene-environment interactions were also found between the OXT polymorphisms rs2740210 and rs4813627 and instrumental care of the infant. These results suggest that variations in genes encoding major brain neurotransmitters and neurohormones are related to observed maternal behaviour and self-reported maternal attitudes. These results showcase the importance of exploring multiple dimensions of complex behavioural phenotypes like mothering.
23

Towards a Language of Interruption

Sturgess, Helen Mary January 2008 (has links)
Master of Visual Arts / My research paper is an attempt to begin to articulate and document my lived experience of being both a mother and an artist. Underpinned by research into the cultural and social history of the experience of mothering and the cultural institution of ‘motherhood’, I revisit and reinterpret some of my earlier works, and explore issues of identity brought up by the relational experience of mothering. I seek out other women who are, or have been, both mothers and artists – particularly sculptors – whose work relates to their subjective experiences of mothering. From them I select and investigate both works, and reflections, which I feel resonate with my own experience of combining the roles of mother and artist. Against this background I describe and interpret my own recent body of work, drawn from my subjective experience of becoming, and being, a mother whilst continuing my artistic practice.
24

Mothering and Anxiety: An Evaluation of the Anxiety Levels of First-time Mothers in Rural Kentucky and Rural Michigan

Chavis, Llena H. 01 August 2014 (has links)
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF LLENA CHAVIS, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in COUNSELING EDUCATION, presented on May 12, 2014, at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. MOTHERING AND ANXIETY: AN EVALUATION OF THE ANXIETY LEVELS OF FIRST-TIME MOTHERS IN RURAL KENTUCKY AND RURAL MICHIGAN MAJOR PROFESSORS: Dr. Kimemia and Dr. Champe Postpartum depression is thoroughly addressed in professional literature, whereas anxiety in first-time mothers is generally addressed as a component of, or with, depression. This dissertation investigated anxiety as a phenomenon distinct from depression evaluated several variables that influence anxiety in first-time mothers. The question, how are maternal sense of competence and perceived social support related to first-time mothers' anxiety in a rural setting, when depression, socioeconomic status (SES), and marital status are controlled for was explored. The population studied in this research is made up of women with children 24 months or younger living in rural Murray, Kentucky, and rural Allegan City in Michigan. The constructs of maternal sense of competence and perceived social support were both found to be significant in explaining first-time mothers' anxiety.
25

Beside her self: a coffin text

Michalofsky, Jessica 22 July 2021 (has links)
I did not purposely set down to write this work but was compelled by a painful sense of what I should not do. What I should not write. To protect the privacy and autonomy of individuals, to avoid creating harm, and to resist, however unsuccessfully, essentializing either “mothers” or “addiction,” this work enacts a radical besideness, where one subject performs the verb of a second subject, where one subject enlist the aid of other subjects. In the aim of both producing and defying narrative structures that seem to fasten a person to their identity, this collaborative, intertextual project attempts to tell a story, both in what is re-told and in what is not-told. It invokes infelicitous performances as a way of talking back while walking forward. / Graduate
26

The Heart of a Mother, The Waves of Mothering: A Narrative Inquiry into Mothering Experiences of Child Weight Management

Fierheller, Dianne January 2022 (has links)
Many stories exist within the professional landscape of child weight management programming and health services. Grand narratives within these spaces story fat bodies as “unhealthy”, “risky” and in need of transformation, and often position the family and mothers in particular given gendered caregiving norms, as responsible for their children’s weight and poor health. Mothering stories and experiences are rarely told by the mothers themselves within this professional landscape. This study is a narrative inquiry that explores the in-depth experiences of two mothers who previously participated with their children in an Ontario paediatric weight management program. Given my work as a social worker within child weight management clinics I also explore my experiences alongside the participants. Clandinin and Connelly’s conceptualization of narrative inquiry and the three dimensional framework of temporality (past, present, future), sociality and place, inquiring inward, outward, backward and forward, were used in order to find meaning in mothering experiences of child weight management. Narrative beginnings share my own experiences of mothering and child weight management. Relational ethics were central as the inquiry unfolded, allowing for simultaneous exploration of experiences, continuous negotiation, awareness and re-evaluation with each mother, from recruitment, field work, to field text, interim text and the writing of the final text. Given the current social distancing restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, conversations took place over zoom and telephone and were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Detailed narrative accounts were written for each mother capturing individual experiences of child weight management as they intersected with many other experiences in their everyday lives. Narrative threads weaved together the mother’s experiences throughout the inquiry and focused on disrupting the grand narrative and resisting fragmentation. The inquiry contributes to the scholarship within fields of social work, social justice, mothering and health care by providing new ways of knowing about and engaging in conversations about mothering, weight, fatness and health. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / This narrative inquiry explores the in-depth experiences of two mothers who previously participated in a child weight management program. As part of this research, I also explore my experiences in relation to the mothers, as a social worker who historically worked in the clinic. Mothers were often positioned as responsible for their children’s body weight and poor health and stories and experiences were rarely told by the mothers themselves across research and policy in the field. Clandinin and Connelly’s three-dimensional framework was used to find meaning in mothering experiences of child weight management. Conversations took place over zoom and telephone over a year. Detailed narrative accounts capture the individual mothering experiences of child weight management and come together in narrative threads that focus on disrupting the grand narrative and resisting fragmentation. The inquiry contributes to the scholarship within fields of social work and health care, providing new ways of knowing about and engaging in conversations about mothering, weight, fatness and health.
27

Modernity and the Matrix of Family Ideologies: How Women Compose a Coherent Narrative of Multiple Identities Over the Life Course

Mika, Marie 29 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
28

Medicine, Monitoring and Motherhood: An Exploration of the Interplay Between Stigma and Paradox in the Child Welfare and Healthcare Systems

Berrouard, Meredith 11 1900 (has links)
There are a number of processes at play within the child welfare and healthcare systems that have the potential to be othering and stigmatizing for people (Pollack, 2010; Snowden, 2003; van Ryn, 2003). These stigmatizing practices are compounded and made all the more complex when the child welfare and healthcare systems operate simultaneously in people’s lives. Despite this, there appears to be limited research about the interplay between the child welfare and healthcare systems in producing stigma, in spite of how closely and recurrently these structures interact and work with one another. This study investigates the interaction of stigmatizing processes and practices at play between Brant Family and Children’s Services and the Brantford General Hospital. Specifically, it explores, from the viewpoint of child welfare staff, the experiences of new mothers receiving perinatal care at this hospital, who are also clients of Brant Family and Children’s Services. This study employs a critical social work framework, coupled with elements of intersectionality and a social justice lens. An eclectic methodological approach was used, integrating tenets of critical and interpretive social science research, and a narrative approach. Four semi-structured, face-to-face interviews were conducted with child protection staff employed at Brant Family and Children’s Services, with six major themes identified, including: the exclusion of mothers within the hospital setting, issues with Brant FACS’ birth alert documentation, and the paradoxical ways in which stigma can operate in the lives of new mothers receiving care at this hospital. These themes are explored and future directions and recommendations are discussed. Suggestions are also made in terms of how these organizations can begin to address the practices at play between both systems that unfortunately, appear to harmfully impact on mothers who are involved with Brant Family and Children’s Services, and receiving perinatal care at the Brantford General Hospital. / Thesis / Master of Social Work (MSW)
29

Mothering and ‘insider’ dilemmas: feminist sociologists in the research process

Cooper, L., Rogers, Chrissie 01 June 2015 (has links)
Yes / This paper is about care, insider positions and mothering within feminist research. We ask questions about how honest, ethical and caring can we really be in placing the self into the research process as mothers ourselves. Should we leave out aspects of the research that do not fit neatly and how ethical can we claim to be if we do? Moreover, should difficult differences, secrets and silences that emerge from the research process and research stories that might 'out' us as failures be excluded from research outcomes so as to claim legitimate research? We consider the use of a feminist methods as crucial in the reciprocal and relational understanding of personal enquiry. Mothers invest significant emotional capital in their families and we explore the blurring of the interpersonal and intrapersonal when sharing mothering experiences common to both participant and researcher. Indeed participants can identify themselves within the process as 'friends' of the researcher. We both have familiarity within our respective research that has led to mutual understanding of having insider positions. Crucially individuals' realities are a vital component of the qualitative paradigm and that 'insider' research remains a necessary, albeit messy vehicle in social research. As it is we consider a growing body of literature which marks out and endorses a feminist ethics of care. All of which critique established ways of thinking about ethics, morality, security, citizenship and care. It provides alternatives in mapping private and public aspects of social life as it operates at a theoretical level, but importantly for this paper also at the level of practical application.
30

Mothering Out of Bounds: Inequality and Resistance in Fat Motherhood

Byers, Lyla Elliott Eaton 22 May 2023 (has links)
What happens when "child bearing hips" become 'too' wide and layered with fat? The medicalization of weight and body size pathologizes difference as deviance, framing fat women as a danger not only to themselves but to society at large when daring to reproduce. This dissertation seeks to uncover the long term impacts of weight stigma at different intersections in order to expand sociological understandings of fatness, health, gender, and inequality in motherhood. It highlights parallel mechanisms of surveillance (for example, between fat and poor mothers) to show how society constructs who "should" and "should not" be parents. Based on a series of 36 in-depth interviews with 18 mothers conducted in the first half of 2022, findings illustrate that the negative social and medical perception of fat motherhood has a significant detrimental impact on the lived experiences of fat mothers. Findings also pull from material culture in the form of representational artifacts from motherhood brought by participants in order to understand how medical and social anti-fatness impacts identity and experiences, and contributes to inequality in fat motherhood. / Doctor of Philosophy / What happens when "child bearing hips" become 'too' wide and layered with fat? The medicalization of weight and body size pathologizes difference as deviance, framing fat women as a danger not only to themselves but to society at large when daring to reproduce. This dissertation seeks to uncover the long term impacts of weight stigma at different intersections in order to expand sociological understandings of fatness, health, gender, and inequality in motherhood. It highlights parallel mechanisms of surveillance to show how society constructs who "should" and "should not" be parents. Based on a series of 36 in-depth interviews with 18 mothers conducted in the first half of 2022, findings illustrate that the negative social and medical perception of fat motherhood has a significant detrimental impact on the lived experiences of fat mothers. Mothers were also invited to bring objects that were of importance to them to discuss the ways in which society's negative views about weight impacted their experience.

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