Individualization and contemporary fatherhood

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Abstract

Abstract
Objective: This article explores dilemmas related to contemporary fatherhood and discusses how theories of individualization enable understanding social change and family life.
Background: Theories on modernization argue that ongoing processes of individualization challenge researchers to reinvent key concepts in family sociology. The concept of intimate fatherhood allows for the exploration of men’s family practices and represents a basis for understanding what modernization means for contemporary parenthood. Intimate fatherhood can be further theorized through empirically sensitive approaches in the study of everyday family life.
Methods: Drawing on data from a mixed-method longitudinal study comprising four waves of data from the 1968 cohort in Denmark (N=1414), the study analyses qualitative interviews from the second and fourth waves. Social psychological discourse analysis of the interviews focused on the participants’ family practices.
Results: The analysis examines how caring intimacy in contemporary fatherhood is interwoven in a complex entanglement with other positions related to partnering and provision. Individualization is theorized as a mode of orientating in life with reference to oneself but not counterposed to social ties and family practices signified by solidarity and togetherness.
Conclusion: Individualization theory can serve to guide analytical attention when studying contemporary fatherhood, but the analysis must remain sensitive to the complex entanglement of everyday family life.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftJournal of Family Research
Vol/bind35
Sider (fra-til)357-371
Antal sider15
ISSN2699-2337
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Emneord

  • Discourse Analysis
  • Everyday life
  • Fatherhood
  • Individualization
  • Social Psychology

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