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Mothering and Mental Health Among Mexican American Mothers (WP-24-15)

Rebecca Seligman

This article explores the experiences of Mexican American mothers who, confronted with the troubled emotions and behaviors of their adolescent children, felt compelled to seek help from mental health clinicians. Their experience is situated in the context of both psychiatrization, or the tendency to treat social problems as mental illness, and the landscape of contemporary mothering in the U.S., where maternal determinism, mother-blame, and the demand for intensive parenting hold sway. In this context, the moral crisis of mental health care-seeking for their children forces mothers to reconcile multiple competing stakes as they navigate the overlapping, and sometimes conflicting, moral-cultural worlds constituted by family and community, as well as mental health care providers. At the same time, it allows them an opportunity to creatively “re-envision” their ways of being mothers and persons.  Their stories and struggles shed new light on contemporary conversations about psychiatrization, everyday morality, and mothering.

Rebecca SeligmanAssociate Professor of Anthropology and IPR Fellow, Northwestern University

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