This work explores matrophobia - the fear not of one's mother or
of motherhood but of becoming one's mother - in past and present
white feminist analyses of motherhood and mothering. By tracing
white second wave feminism's strategic choice to organize first as
sisters then as daughters, O'Brien Hallstein argues matrophobia
became embedded in past and continues to linger in contemporary
feminist analyses. As a result, contemporary analyses reveal
crucially important but limited understandings of contemporary
motherhood and mothering. This important work concludes that
matrophobia can be reduced and eliminated by reorienting analyses
to mutual responsiveness between sisters and daughters, second and
third wave feminists.
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