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Researching Motherhood in the Age of Short Videos: Stay-at-Home Mothers in China Performing Labor on Douyin
[journal article]
Abstract Addressing the particular context of China, this article has two aims. First, it offers reflections on the possibilities and limitations of using user-generated short videos (vlogs) as research data both methodologically and ethically. We specifically explore the potential of centering vlogs as a ne... view more
Addressing the particular context of China, this article has two aims. First, it offers reflections on the possibilities and limitations of using user-generated short videos (vlogs) as research data both methodologically and ethically. We specifically explore the potential of centering vlogs as a new format for examining motherhood behavior across online and offline spaces. Secondly, it adds to the thematic literature on the (re)production and representations of motherhood. We critically examine the rising phenomenon in China of the stay-at-home mother, by exploring how these mothers use short video platforms. Inductively learning from the thematic analysis of short videos of stay-at-home mothers published on Douyin, the patterns in the data indicate three distinct forms of labor are performed through digital motherhood practices: domestic labor, affective labor, and entrepreneurial labor. Drawing on these patterns, we update the original framework of "motherhood 2.0," which was coined in the 2010s to address mothering practices in industrialized western societies. We extend this framework and conceptualize "motherhood 3.0" by analyzing a type of Chinese community-based intersectional performance of motherhood, gender, and labor that we see emerging in digital cultural production centered on short videos. Mediated labor within online and offline motherhood practices is informed by social, cultural, and technological factors. Digital technologies and mobile media communication provide new means for stay-at-home mothers to navigate between their roles as devoted mothers and their pursuit of self-actualization.... view less
Keywords
digital media; labor; housewife; motherhood; China; video; ; self-realization
Classification
Interactive, electronic Media
Free Keywords
Douyin; digital motherhood practices; stay-at-home mothers; vlog
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 273-289
Journal
Media and Communication, 10 (2022) 3
Issue topic
Across Mobile Online and Offline Spaces: Reflections on Methods, Practices, and Ethics
ISSN
2183-2439
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed