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Motherhood in Britain, c. 1945-2000

Dr Angela Davis

Looking through the prism of motherhood provides a way of understanding the complex social changes that have taken place in the post-war world. Motherhood is an area where a number of discourses and practices meet, such as education, health care, psychology, labour market trends and state intervention. The experience of motherhood has a wide resonance, demonstrating change in women’s lives, gender relations, culture and society, family and community patterns, health and welfare, and the relationship between the family and the state. Drawing on the themes of continuity and change my research examines the legacies of these developments and will consider what they indicate about both the past and future of motherhood in England. The research is based on c. 150 oral history interviews. The use of oral history enables us to rethink our understanding of women’s lives. Oral history reveals the subtleties in the experience of motherhood and the diversity of responses, which can challenge existing assumptions and traditional historical accounts. Reflecting the ways in which the oral history interviews conducted for the project can offer both objective and subjective information, my aim is to uncover the multifaceted experience of motherhood.

This research originates from two principal projects. As a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow I undertook a research project looking at attitudes and experiences of motherhood in Britain between 1970 and 1990 entitled 'Motherhood, c. 1970-1990: An Oral History'. Women’s lives were transformed during the period 1970-1990. Less than a third of married women were in paid employment in 1961; in 1991 it was over half. Women had fewer children, were less likely to marry and increasingly cohabited. Based on seventy oral history interviews with Oxfordshire women the project questioned how this new social climate challenged existing understandings of motherhood and what women felt about its consequences. This Leverhulme funded research extended my prior doctoral thesis which was entitled ‘Motherhood in Oxfordshire, c. 1945-1970: A Study of Attitudes, Experiences and Ideals’. Based on ninety-two oral history interviews with Oxfordshire women it identified the difficulties mothers faced during the period 1945-1970 and the ways in which women organised themselves to improve their lives. It also revealed that women thought significant changes took place in the lives of mothers after 1970, which inspired me to undertake the follow-up study.

 Events Events
  • 20 June 2008 - ‘Advice to Mothers’ Workshop. The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick.
 Publications Publications (Selected)
  • Angela Davis, Modern Motherhood: Women and Family in England c. 1945-2000, Manchester University Press, (2012).
  • Angela Davis, ‘A revolution in maternity care? Women and the maternity services, Oxfordshire c. 1948-1974’, Social History of Medicine.
  • Angela Davis, ‘When I was young you just went and asked your mother.’ The changing role of friends and kin in the transmission of knowledge about maternity in post-1945 Britain’, Medizin, Gesellschaft und Geschichte.

 Confs 

Conferences / Seminar Papers (Selected)
  • Angela Davis (2011), ‘Maternal bodies: women and the maternity services in Britain, c. 1945-2000’; The Gender and History Forum, Oxford University.
  • Angela Davis (2011), ‘Women's experiences of the maternity services in Oxfordshire and Berkshire, c. 1970-1990’, The Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Cambridge.
  • Angela Davis (2010), ‘Motherhood, medicine and oral history’; Off Sick Seminar Series; Cardiff University.
  • Angela Davis (2010), ‘Educational organisation, pressure group or social network? The National Childbirth Trust in Britain c. 1957-2000’; Politics and practices: the history of post-war women's health; Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, University of Manchester.


 

Motherhood