Expressing Anxiety? Breast pump usage in American wage workplaces
- 17 October 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Gender, Place & Culture
- Vol. 14 (5) , 551-567
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09663690701562248
Abstract
This article considers the potential and problems for women seeking to combine breastfeeding with wage labor outside the home through the use of breast pumps. After locating the breast pump within cultural, historical and legislative contexts of shifting views about infant nutrition on the one hand and trends in women's participation in the wage work force on the other, we unpack how this technology has re-shaped the landscape of choices about infant feeding in the United States. Using disciplinary lenses of science and technology studies, feminist geography and women's studies, we examine how the breast pump has reshaped workplace experiences after childbirth. Based on interviews and survey data with respondents in Albany, New York across a range of class and racial backgrounds, we submit that while the breast pump does allow some women to combine breastfeeding and wage work outside the home, the advantages of breast pumps are constrained both by cultural attitudes about pumping as an activity, the lack of a sufficient legislative framework, as well as by the way workplaces themselves are designed.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Book ReviewWomen's Studies International Forum, 2004
- Between neoliberalism and cultural conservatism: spatial divisions and multiplications of hospice labor in the United StatesGender, Place & Culture, 2004
- “Neither forget nor remember your sex”: sexual politics in the early twentieth-century Canadian officeJournal of Historical Geography, 2003
- At Work, At Home? New Geographies of Work and Care-giving under Welfare Reform in the USSpace and Polity, 2003
- BOUNDED LIBERATIONGender & Society, 2001
- EXTENDING THE “BRIGHT LINE”Gender & Society, 2000
- “Race,” Space, and Power: The Survival Strategies of Working Poor WomenAnnals of the American Association of Geographers, 1998
- The effect of work status on initiation and duration of breast-feeding.American Journal of Public Health, 1998
- Technology and GenderPublished by University of California Press ,1997
- Mothers, Babies, and Breastfeeding in Late Capitalist America: The Shifting Contexts of Feminist TheoryFeminist Studies, 1993