Men do care! A gender-aware and masculinity-informed contribution to caregiving scholarship.
- Författare
- Wallroth, V.
- Titel
- Men do care! A gender-aware and masculinity-informed contribution to caregiving scholarship.
- Utgivningsår
- 2016
- Stad
- Linköping
- Utgivare
- Studies in Art and Sciences No. 674
- Universitet
- Linköpings University
- Sammanfattning
In caregiving literature, it is often the female gender that has been the focus of attention,
and in particular women's unpaid labor. Studies also tend to make comparisons
between men's and women's caregiving, using men's caregiving experiences to show
not only that women face greater burdens, but also that men's needs can be disregarded.
This means that while gender analyses are not uncommon in the caregiving literature,
gender tends to be equated with womanhood. The research problem that this dissertation
addresses is therefore the gender bias that characterizes caregiving scholarship
at present and the fact that this bias is impeding us from moving the debates on
care and caregiving forward. The aim of the dissertation is twofold. Firstly, it attempts
to contribute to the rectification of the gender bias in question by focusing on men's
caregiving and answering the following research questions: What motivates men to
provide care for their elderly parents? How do adult sons experience caregiving? What
do adult sons think that care and caregiving are, i.e. what are their perspectives on
care? Secondly, this dissertation also aims to explore whether a gender-aware and
masculinity-informed perspective can be used to enhance our understanding of caregiving.
Thus, through a phenomenological analysis of interviews with 19 caregiving
adult sons and sons-in-law, this dissertation discusses how motives, experiences and
perspectives, which have so far been interpreted as unique to women, are also matters
that men talk about and consider important in caregiving. The dissertation argues
therefore that much could be gained if we were to rectify the gender bias that characterizes
the literature on family caregiving and explore caregiving men in the genderaware
and masculinity-informed way that is lacking in this literature at present. Inspired
by the debate within studies of masculinity, the dissertation argues that within
the debate on care there is a hegemony of care which has so far tended to exclude
men's perspectives on caregiving because literature on family caregiving has regarded
women as the ideal caregivers. This dissertation shows that a gender-aware and masculinity-informed
perspective on care can increase our understanding of family caregiving
and contribute to the rectification of the gender bias that care research suffers
from. Against this backdrop, it is proposed that caregiving men should not solely be
regarded as empirically interesting. This is because they are an unexploited and theoretically
profuse source of information about caregiving.
Keywords: care, family caregiving, gender, men, masculinity, motive, experience, perspective