Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/24301
Title: Postfeminism, hybrid mumpreneur identities and the reproduction of masculine entrepreneurship
Authors: Lewis, P
Rumens, N
Simpson, R
Keywords: hybrid entrepreneurial femininities;masculine entrepreneurship;mumpreneur;neoliberalism;postfeminism
Issue Date: 15-May-2021
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Citation: Lewis, P., Rumens, N. and Simpson, R. (2022) 'Postfeminism, hybrid mumpreneur identities and the reproduction of masculine entrepreneurship', International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship, 40 (1), pp. 68 - 89. doi: 10.1177/02662426211013791.
Abstract: Copyright © The Author(s) 2021. Mobilising postfeminism as an analytical device, this article re-examines how women business owners discursively engage with the identity of the mumpreneur. Drawing on interviews with women business owners, this article reconceptualises the compatibility between motherhood and entrepreneurship associated with the mumpreneur, in terms of a hybrid identity that interlinks feminine and masculine behaviours connected to home and work. Study data reveal the discursive practices present in interview accounts – choosing family and work, strategic mumpreneurship and enhancing the business without limits – which draw on postfeminist discourses to constitute hybrid entrepreneurial femininities associated with the mumpreneur category. The article contributes to the gender and entrepreneurship literature, in particular, the scholarship on mumpreneurship, by first, showing how engagement with the mumpreneur identity is implicated in the reproduction of masculine entrepreneurship; second, demonstrates how encounters with the mumpreneur contribute to the creation of a hierarchy of entrepreneurial identities which reinforces the masculine norm; and third considers how the mumpreneur as a hybrid identity mobilises entrepreneurship in children in gendered ways. While the emergence of the mumpreneur as a contemporary entrepreneurial identity has positively impacted how women’s entrepreneurship is viewed, the study demonstrates that it has not disrupted dominant discourses of masculine entrepreneurship or gendered power relations in the entrepreneurial field.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/24301
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/02662426211013791
ISSN: 0266-2426
Appears in Collections:Brunel Business School Research Papers

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