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To browse Academia. International Conference on Gender Studies. Motherhood, which has various meanings throughout history, is generally seen as a concept conjoined to being a woman, even in different cultures. The masculine perspective in the political, social and economic processes through the role and identity of being a mother, ignores the feelings and moods produced by women on the concept of motherhood, and shapes the social structure especially through the media by means of the codes they create with the list of what should be.
Masculine perspective was disabled by inviting especially female ceramic artists to the exhibition. Ceramic material was particularly restricted in the exhibiton. Because throughout history, the first owner of terracotta work from different cultures is usually women. When this business became a craft that could be turned into money, it was taken from Carla Pascoe Leahy. New motherhood is mediated through the material world. In this liminal, vulnerable period of matrescence, consumption of and interaction with objects co-constitutes the mother and her child.
Material culture is central to motherhood, as mothers negotiate preparation, mastery and memorialisation of their maternal role through objects. While some objects are used once then discarded, other objects are saved for longer periods, either by individuals within private collections or by curators in cultural institutions. In preserving certain aspects of the material culture with which mothers interact, a form of maternal heritage is created which is inescapably partial.
This article examines the ways in which mothers, mothering and motherhood are preserved and memorialised in public and private collections. It analyses maternal material culture in cultural institutions alongside personal archives, drawing out the synchronies and divergences between them as well as the ways in which material culture has changed since the mid-twentieth century. It concludes by discussing the ways in which the maternal heritage constituted through institutional and private archiving makes possible certain aspects of the history of mothers while obscuring others.