Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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Exploring patterns of mother-blaming in anorexia scholarship

a study in the sociology of knowledge

Thomas van der VenMarikay van der Ven

pp. 97-119

Abstract

Mother-blame, the propensity to explain negative outcomes for children by focusing on the failures of mothers, has a long history in the social-scientific study of adolescent deviance. We examine trends in mother-blaming over time by performing a textual analysis of scholarly accounts of the etiology of anorexia nervosa. Our reading of these expert accounts suggests that mother-blaming for child pathology is interconnected with changing ideas about proper social roles for women. Deficient mothering, that is, was often linked to a woman's ambitiousness, willingness to abandon familial duties in favor of careers, or, conversely, her embracement of patriarchal proscriptions for what a woman should be. Poor maternal parenting was a consistent and dominant theme through much of the period we analyzed, however, the structural and cultural explanations appeared to change substance and form in synchrony with prevailing ideas about a woman's rightful relationship to the paid labor market. Other social explanations for changing rhetoric, including the gender composition of published accounts, are also explored.

Publication details

Published in:

(2003) Human Studies 26 (1).

Pages: 97-119

DOI: 10.1023/A:1022527631743

Full citation:

van der Ven Thomas, van der Ven Marikay (2003) „Exploring patterns of mother-blaming in anorexia scholarship: a study in the sociology of knowledge“. Human Studies 26 (1), 97–119.