Connie’s Reviews > Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries > Status Update

Connie
Connie is on page 87 of 288
“With few opportunities for women to earn a living wage, their economic survival depended on marriage. By the late 1950s, marriage came to be known as women’s "eternal employment," something from which they could never retire.”
May 23, 2026 02:59PM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries

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Connie’s Previous Updates

Connie
Connie is on page 272 of 288
“The goal now should be to create societies in which having children is not driven by war, colonialism, or capitalism but by people's genuine desire to be parents, with all the difficulty and joy that can bring. And then to honor parents' work with support so they can make the choices that allow them to live full, rich, modern lives.”
May 25, 2026 08:36AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 268 of 288
May 25, 2026 08:30AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 264 of 288
“Even admitting that she feels a longing to be with her child—and is willing to make professional sacrifices to satisfy it—is a brave and radical act in a culture that has used that kind of deep personal desire to justify gender inequality and push women into serving as the social safety net. But it is her way of staying true to who she is…”
May 25, 2026 08:28AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 259 of 288
“[Aurélie Athan, a clinic psychologist and faculty member at Teachers College, Columbia University] argues that the difference is, society allows teenagers to grow into whatever type of adult they wish to be whereas there’s an expectation mothers will fit into the maternal archetype their culture demands. "But there are so many ways of mothering as there are mothers, because they’re people."”
May 25, 2026 08:25AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 252 of 288
“The challenge was, and remains, to give motherhood real civic power without essentializing women as caregivers.”
May 25, 2026 08:21AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 226 of 288
May 25, 2026 07:32AM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 192 of 288
"The government does not give mothers enough support and respect. Financial support is one thing but there's not enough support for mothers to return to work. It's really difficult and in lots of different contexts, I can feel that it's not equal for men and women here."
May 24, 2026 07:10PM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 147 of 288
"I think it's in some ways harder for working dads who want to be really involved parents because they get less flexibility at work, whether implied or outright; it's still sort of going against the gender norm, like of course moms will want to be with their kids but if guys want to be with their kids, that's unmanly or there's a lot of baggage about that."
May 23, 2026 06:26PM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 130 of 288
"I didn't see his needs or his fragility enough, and I think it surprised him as well." She feels responsible to help him through the turbulence of new parenthood. But as author Gemma Hartley writes, managing a partner's emotional state can exact a psychic toll. "Women are, in many unpaid ways, expected to keep those around us comfortable at all costs—including the cost to self."”
May 23, 2026 05:32PM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


Connie
Connie is on page 126 of 288
May 23, 2026 05:27PM
Four Mothers: An Intimate Journey through the First Year of Parenthood in Four Countries


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Connie “Many feminists who'd helmed successful labor movements before the war now joined Shufuren, the Housewives Association. Among its members were women who had lost children in the war and wanted to be free once and for all from the awful encumbrance of martial motherhood. As the Japanese Mothers' Congress wrote in 1955: "Because of the war, the pride and joy of being a mother has been shattered. Mothers were even forbidden from expressing the reasonable feeling that they felt in their hearts: that war was detestable. We were not even allowed to shed tears of farewell while we sent our children off to war; we just gritted our teeth." They wanted to wrest back control of motherhood and argued it should be viewed not as a blessing but as a right, with all the attendant protections: maternal healthcare, child welfare programs, and a national commitment to peace. They made clear mothers would no longer raise their children for the state, but instead, expect the state to help them raise their children.”


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