| Literature DB >> 24682321 |
Hatsumi Taniguchi1, Mieki Shimada2, Meredith McIntyre3.
Abstract
This study explores the meaning of the lived experience of childbirth and parenting of Japanese men who became fathers in a foreign country. Japanese men have been raised to maintain very strict gender roles, excluding them from sharing with their wives the experience of childbirth and the day-to-day parenting of young children. The study employed a descriptive phenomenological approach with in-depth interviews. Participants included nine Japanese men born and raised in Japan who were living in Honolulu. Three theme categories emerged from the data: "making active efforts in preparation for childbirth in a foreign country"; "challenges in pregnancy, childbirth, child care, and as husbands or partners"; and "challenges in transition to parenthood." Japanese men successfully altered their transitional and authoritarian gender role to a family orientated social structure, under the influence of Western values, when living in foreign country. By spending more time with their new family, they acknowledged the processes of becoming a father. The ability to adapt their expectations of fatherhood in line with Western values was enhanced by the support of coworkers, their mature age, rich educational background, and the personal financial resources of the male participants in the study.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese; fatherhood; foreign country; phenomenology; transition
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24682321 DOI: 10.1177/1043659614524231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transcult Nurs ISSN: 1043-6596 Impact factor: 1.959