44 The Nation. May 28, 2018
book or website; the pride and pleasure and
self-righteousness of doing it “right.” The
rage I sometimes felt when I sat down at the
end of the day, exhausted, and was forced to
acknowledge that my life was no longer my
own—a rage that was immediately checked
by long bouts of self-recrimination, then
sublimated into a series of perfectly posed
photographs of my children, beautiful and
happy and utterly oblivious to my distress. I
was grateful to Rose for giving voice to these
conflicted realities, for inviting her reader to
acknowledge them without fear or shame. It
struck me that she had positioned herself as a
mother to mothers, ready to soothe all of us
who felt like we were constantly failing.
O
ne of the cruelest ironies of mother-
hood is that the harder it becomes to
sustain the ideal of maternal perfec-
tion, the more women feel—and are
made to feel—beholden to it. “As
austerity and inequality increase across the
globe,” and as “more and more children
are falling into poverty,” Rose explains, the
“focus on mothers is a sure-fire diversion-
ary tactic, not least because it so effec-
tively deflects from what might be far more
disruptive forms of social critique.” For
Rose, the failures of mothers become leg-
ible as the failures of society at large, placing
motherhood at the heart of contemporary
debates over immigration policy and ethno-
nationalism, racism and police brutality, and
the future of the welfare state in the United
States and United Kingdom.
There is something oddly conspirato-
rial about Rose’s tone when she starts talking
about politics. “Because mothers are seen as
our point of entry into the world,” she insists,
“there is nothing easier than to make social
deterioration look like something which it is
the sacred duty of mothers to prevent.” The
exaggerated language of blame that Rose
attributes to unreal actors—those shadowy
entities using mothers as a “sure-fire diver-
sionary tactic” from more “disruptive forms
of social critique”—only further deflects
from the larger question of why austerity
has made mothering harder than before. It is
because austerity policies have shifted nearly
all the burdens of social reproduction from
the state onto families, making them wholly
responsible for feeding, clothing, educating,
and caring for their children, that mothers
are blamed for the persistence of problems
that previously were not exclusively theirs to
solve. Rose does, at times, acknowledge this.
But her larger project fails to emphasize that
this has nothing to do with the primal fears
or fantasies of individuals. It is a social and
historical failure—a dimension of caregiving
that Rose’s analysis largely sidesteps, yielding
some sweeping (and incorrect) claims about
the politics of motherhood.
It is in the realm of politics that we find
mothers whose vulnerability has provoked
extraordinary vitriol. Take Rose’s example
of mothers like Bimbo Ayelabola, the Nige-
from TRIPAS
Conduzco y conduces
—carpoolers & Catholics—
conduction wires to Latin.
“Brought together”
—heads bowed as if praying—
these women make
strange communion—
wafer after wafer,
paper-thin shavings from
ingots of germanium.
Solder-stitch to populate
breadboard to motherboard
or read ohm resistors
—by their bands of color—
in circuit board syntax.
Solid state switches—
a nascent ancient rotary
& tin can to starlight.
—
Chicana Cherríe Moraga writing
on her mother’s ‘piecework’
for the nearby electronics plant
explains how her mother nightly
sat before the TV ‘wrapping
copper wires into the backs of
circuit boards.’ Braiding, I thought,
to parse & plait those wires
that would light the very images
she watched. I then looked up
in Cosmo that knot-work.
French, Dutch, Halo, Fishtail,
Milkmaid, Spiral, & Braid to Bun
—those chongos my nana made
over the years—the yank
& tugged-tie, the brush-work
through the hair of sus hijas
that sometimes produced a spark.
BRANDON SOM