Volume 15, Issue 2, June 2023, Page 119-134
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Category Archives: Arts and Health
Choreographing collaboratories: studios of situated improvisations
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Watching change: attuning to the tempo of decay with pumpkin, weather and young children
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Working with childhoods and energies: critical reflections on specifying and locating the intangible
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‘There’s nothing I can do to stop it’: homelessness among autistic people in a British city
Police interactions and the autistic community: perceptions of procedural justice
Technologies for inclusive employment: beyond the prosthetic fix–social transformation axis
Claiming chaos narrative, emerging from silence
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‘Even if it’s flawed it’s still beautiful’: life lessons learned by adolescents with neurological conditions at summer camp
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Ever more parents in polyamorous families: A new materialist typology of parenting practices and division of work
Sexualities, Ahead of Print.
An analysis of parents that are a part of polyamorous networks—networks of three, four, or even more residential or highly available parents—shows three types of parenting practices: poly-nuclear, hierarchical, and egalitarian parenting. Especially, the hierarchical and egalitarian parenting practices show novel divisions of care work and a transgression of gender norms. However, in-depth new materialist analysis of qualitative interviews also shows how parents are, in specific situations, pushed toward standard family models and thus unintentionally maintain traditional family structures and gender roles.
An analysis of parents that are a part of polyamorous networks—networks of three, four, or even more residential or highly available parents—shows three types of parenting practices: poly-nuclear, hierarchical, and egalitarian parenting. Especially, the hierarchical and egalitarian parenting practices show novel divisions of care work and a transgression of gender norms. However, in-depth new materialist analysis of qualitative interviews also shows how parents are, in specific situations, pushed toward standard family models and thus unintentionally maintain traditional family structures and gender roles.