Episódios

  • Breast is best, or best is fed? In this episode, we tackle one of the most controversial aspects of mothering: feeding. Everyone seems to have an opinion about it. But, as Maddy and Chine find out in this episode, debate about whether and how mothers feed their children has been going on for centuries – including Victorian prudishness about the Virgin Mary breastfeeding Jesus.

    No matter how we feed our children, will there always be ways to shame women? Why is feeding often talked about in machine-like ways such as milk ‘production’ and ‘lactation’, and how is technological advancement such as developments in ‘biomilk’ going to transform feeding?

    We talk to a range of experts to explore how mothers bear witness to something that society as a whole has forgotten – that we are part of nature, that our bodies require care and nourishment, that we are vulnerable and dependent, and also that the ways in which feeding opens a door intro transcendence. We explore theological ideas of feeding and what it tells us about Christian concepts of God, including 14th century mystic Julian of Norwich’s writing about ‘divine milk’.

    Chapters

    00:00 The Centrality of Feeding in Motherhood

    03:00 Motherhood vs. The Machine: A Broader Perspective

    06:01 Personal Experiences with Feeding

    09:11 Cultural and Historical Context of Feeding

    11:59 The Role of Technology in Feeding

    15:02 The Politics of Feeding: Societal Pressures and Judgments

    20:38 The Politics of Motherhood and Responsibility

    22:42 Cultural Perspectives on Breastfeeding

    27:11 Maternal Imagery in Religious Contexts

    34:15 Artistic Representations of Motherhood

    43:01 Embodiment and Spirituality in Motherhood

    Featured in this episode: Joanna Wolfarth, cultural historian and author of Milk: An Intimate History of Breastfeeding; theologian Rachel Muers, chair of divinity at the University of Edinburgh; the Very Rev Dominic Barrington, dean of York Minster; Rev Ayla Lepine, associate record at St James’s Piccadilly and former Ahmanson fellow in art and religion at the National Gallery; Dominic Barrington; medical ethicist and author Claire Gilbert, author of I, Julian.

    Keywords

    motherhood, feeding, breastfeeding, cultural history, societal pressures, technology, maternal health, infant feeding, public policy, women's experiences, motherhood, breastfeeding, cultural perspectives, maternal imagery, spirituality, art, responsibility, societal norms, religious contexts, embodiment

    The Team:

    🎙️ Hosts: Chine McDonald (@ChineMcDonald) and Madeleine Pennington (@mlmpennington)

    🎬 Executive producer: Stephanie Tam

    🎧 Audio editor and sound engineer: David Benjamin Blower

    🎛️ Recording engineer and assistant producer: Daniel Turner

  • Warning: This episode includes discussion of pregnancy and childbirth, including birth trauma and child loss.

    Chine and Maddy go back to the beginning, and explore the physical and spiritual changes that takes place in pregnancy, and the embodied nature of giving birth.

    How has something that is a universal human experience come to signify something alien and traumatic? How does becoming a mum alter the sense of individualism Western society pushes us towards, and open our eyes to interdependence? In a so-called post-religious age, have we lost some of the rituals that recognise the transition to motherhood as a transcendent, spiritual and existential experience?

    We discuss the ways in which machines help women and their babies thrive; but as scientific advancement accelerates, how might the prospect of growing babies in artificial wombs or ‘bio-bags’ affect the place of mother and challenge our conceptions of what it really means to be human?

    Chapters

    00:00 Introduction to Motherhood vs. the Machine

    03:11 Exploring the Complexity of Mothering Work

    05:01 Personal Experiences of Pregnancy and Childbirth

    11:20 Cultural Narratives and the Experience of Labor

    17:49 The Role of Community and Support in Motherhood

    23:21 Racial Inequality in Maternal Health

    29:52 The Future of Pregnancy: Technology and Machines

    38:11 The Transformative Nature of Motherhood

    45:14 Conclusion and Reflection on Motherhood

    Featured in this episode: Theologian Rachel Muers, chair of divinity at the University of Edinburgh; writer Mary Harrington, contributing editor of Unherd, and author of Feminism Against Progress; Lucy Jones, author of Matrescence: On the Metamorphosis of Pregnancy, Childbirth and Motherhood; Professor Dominic Wilkinson, medical ethicist and neonatal intensive care doctor

    Keywords

    motherhood, pregnancy, childbirth, technology, maternal health, cultural narratives, community support, racial inequality, personal experiences, future of pregnancy

    The Team

    🎙️ Hosts: Chine McDonald (@ChineMcDonald) and Madeleine Penninton (@mlmpennington)

    🎬 Executive producer: Stephanie Tam

    🎧 Audio editor and sound engineer: David Benjamin Blower

    🎛️ Recording engineer and assistant producer: Daniel Turner

    💡 Produced by the ‪@thinktanktheos‬ www.theosthinktank.co.uk/

    With thanks to the Fetzer Institute

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  • Intensive mothering. Parental burnout. The juggle is real. The series opens with a look at the relationship and distinctions between paid work and the unpaid work of mothering; the differences between intellectual and bodily work, and where mothering fits into all this. Is a woman’s place in the home, or the workplace, and what pressures or opportunities arise when mothers are in both?

    Chine and Maddy discuss the realities of being pregnant and becoming mothers while working, and speak to experts about how motherhood and work have changed over the centuries, exploring how machines have shaped the experience of working women.

    This is a podcast for everyone. All those with questions about what it means to be a person rather than a machine, and exactly where the distinction lies.

    Chapters

    00:00 The Struggles of New Motherhood

    03:00 Exploring the Nature of Motherhood

    05:59 The Intersection of Work and Motherhood

    09:00 The Hidden Labor of Mothering

    11:59 The Historical Context of Motherhood and Work

    18:56 The Economic Value of Motherhood

    25:12 The Evolution of Child Benefit and Feminism

    29:31 The Impact of the Pandemic on Gender Roles

    32:34 The Interdependence of Motherhood

    36:01 Intensive Mothering in the Modern Age

    40:22 The Complexity of Mothering Work

    46:30 The Value of Mothering in Society

    51:14 Exploring the Future of Motherhood

    Featured in this episode: The Bear Cubs toddler group in London; Lucy Jones, author of Matrescence: On the Metamorphosis of Pregnancy, Childbirth and Motherhood; Professor Helen McCarthy of Cambridge University, author of Double Lives: A History of Working Motherhood Dr Charlotte Faircloth, Associate Professor in the Social Research Institute at UCL, and Mary Harrington, contributing editor of Unherd, and author of Feminism Against Progress; speak to Chine at Howthelightgetsin festival; and theologian and writer Laura Fabrycky.

    Keywords

    motherhood, technology, work-life balance, societal expectations, maternal experience, historical context, economic value, motherhood and work, motherhood struggles, motherhood insights, motherhood, feminism, child benefit, pandemic, gender roles, intensive mothering, caregiving, societal value, interdependence, childcare

    The Team:

    🎙️ Hosts: Chine McDonald (@ChineMcDonald) and Madeleine Penninton (@mlmpennington)

    🎬 Executive producer: Stephanie Tam

    🎧 Audio editor and sound engineer: David Benjamin Blower

    🎛️ Recording engineer and assistant producer: Daniel Turner

    💡 Produced by the ‪@thinktanktheos‬ www.theosthinktank.co.uk/

    With thanks to the Fetzer Institute

  • Welcome to our new four-part documentary podcast, Motherhood vs The Machine, where hosts Chine McDonald and Dr Madeleine Pennington look at what motherhood teaches us about what it means to be human.

    The work of motherhood has always been changed by technological advancement: from the nipple shield to the feeding bottle and breast pump. But as technological advancement accelerates and a future of artificial wombs and ‘bio bags’ does not seem as far-fetched as it once did, what of the humanity of motherhood might be lost if it is outsourced to machines? What might we miss when the maternal doorway is closed to profound and rarely expressed spiritual ideas - such as sacrifice, love, care, value, dignity, and hope?

    🎙️ Follow Chine McDonald: @ChineMcDonald

    🎙️ Follow Dr Madeleine Pennington: @mlmpennington

    💡 Produced by the ‪@thinktanktheos‬ www.theosthinktank.co.uk/