Abstract
This paper compares experiences of breastfeeding outside the home for women living in low-income and high-income neighborhoods of the same city. Our findings are based on an analysis of 22 interviews with breastfeeding mothers (11 in each of two study areas) undertaken in Bristol, UK in 2017. We extend existing scholarship by showing how experiences of breastfeeding vary not only at the regional level but between local areas of the same city, and outline how our findings can inform policy. We advance literature on maternal bodies by exploring how local “landscapes” of breastfeeding emerge as mothers encounter and negotiate different socio-material landscapes and locally-differentiated norms about “appropriate” maternal embodiment. We argue that these variegated interactions can lead to different orientations to space and forms of spatial practice on the part of breastfeeding mothers, as well as different kinds of maternal identities.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 102125 |
Journal | Health and Place |
Volume | 59 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Sept 2019 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2019
Keywords
- Breastfeeding in public
- Local-area variation
- Maternal embodiment
- Neighborhood-scale
- Spatial practice