| Literature DB >> 30542235 |
Dawn Mannay1, Jordon Creaghan2, Dunla Gallagher3, Ruby Marzella4, Sherelle Mason5, Melanie Morgan3, Aimee Grant3.
Abstract
Pregnancy and motherhood are increasingly subjected to surveillance by medical professionals, the media, and the general public, and discourses of ideal parenting are propagated alongside an admonishment of the perceived "failing" maternal subject. However, despite this scrutiny, the mundane activities of parenting are often impervious to ethnographic forms of inquiry. Challenges for ethnographic researchers include the restrictions of becoming immersed in the private space of the home where parenting occurs and an institutional structure that discourages exploratory and long-term fieldwork. This paper draws on four studies, involving thirty-four participants, that explored their journeys into the space of parenthood and their everyday experiences. The studies all employed forms of visual ethnography, including artifacts, photo elicitation, timelines, collage, and sandboxing. The paper argues that visual methodologies can enable access to unseen aspects of parenting and engender forms of temporal extension, which can help researchers to disrupt the restrictions of tightly time bounded projects.Entities:
Keywords: fieldwork; home; motherhood; photo elicitation; visual methods
Year: 2017 PMID: 30542235 PMCID: PMC6238173 DOI: 10.1177/0891241617744858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Contemp Ethnogr ISSN: 0891-2416