Abstract
We explore the foodwork performed by white middle-class mothers in the United Kingdom who were preparing to feed their families in anticipation of post-Brexit resource scarcity. We illustrate their laborious preparations (‘prep-work’) as they stockpiled items (mostly food) in anticipation of shortages. We reveal tensions in how they envisaged how (and who) to feed. Analysis reveals how our (privileged, white middle-class) participants enrolled ‘good’ motherhood into prep-work and engaged in a new form of ‘othering’. Non-prepping ‘(m)others’ were positioned as deficient, ‘bad’ parents due to failure to save children from post-Brexit risk/hunger, and participants downplayed their own (classed and material) advantage in being able to prepare. By exploring their prep-work accounts, we illustrate how they assumed a morally superior motherhood position to the non-prepared underclass and make several contributions. First, we extend foodwork categories, recognizing additional foodwork of managing and hiding stockpiles (given stigma/ridicule surrounding prep-work). Second, we illustrate the darker side of motherhood that prep-work revealed, which clashes with elements of intensive motherhood ideology. Third, we illuminate the ‘othering’ of a new parental underclass: the unprepared.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Number of pages | 19 |
| Journal | Gender, Work and Organization |
| Early online date | 4 Nov 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 4 Nov 2023 |
Bibliographical note
© 2023 The Authors.Keywords
- foodwork
- gendered labor
- morality
- mothering
- othering
- prep-work
- social class
Cite this
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver