11
Mar
Notification of public defence with Laura Lapinske, Gender Studies
Laura Lapinske presents her doctoral thesis ”Care to live: Everyday strategies among singles mothers in Lithuania”.
Subject: Gender Studies
Research area: Critical and Cultural Theory
Graduate school: Baltic and East European Graduate School (BEEGS)
Language: English
The public defence of doctoral thesis will take place on Friday 27 March 2026. See the link below.
Abstract:
This thesis, “Care to Live”, offers an in-depth ethnographic study of well-educated single mothers navigating everyday life in Kaunas, Lithuania—a post-socialist semi-periphery marked by structural precarity. Through feminist activist ethnography, the author examines how these women develop material, emotional, and social strategies to survive and care within conditions shaped by neoliberalism, insufficient welfare systems, and societal stigma.
The thesis is grounded in Social Reproduction Theory and feminist critiques of neoliberalism. It highlights how care work – often unpaid and invisibilised – is central to single mothers' lives, constituting both a burden and a potential site of resistance. Lapinske interrogates how normative ideals of family, motherhood, and success intersect with class, gender, and labour to shape women’s lived experiences.
Divided into six main chapters, the thesis addresses: transformations in post-Soviet Lithuania; the stigma and material hardships faced by single mothers; coping mechanisms including informal support networks of kin, neighbours, and friends; and the redefinition of maternal “failure” as a political critique of neoliberal expectations. Drawing from interviews, diary notes, and observations, Lapinske documents how these women reclaim agency and community through care practices, solidarity, and creative resilience – often resisting imposed ideals of perfect motherhood, strength and self-sufficiency.
Ultimately, “Care to Live” argues that single motherhood in Lithuania must be understood not as individual deficiency but as a site where systemic inequalities – especially gendered and classed precarities – manifest and are resisted. The work contributes to feminist ethnography, post-socialist studies, and care politics by centring the voices and strategies of women at the margins of dominant narratives.
Keywords: single motherhood, precarity, post-socialism, Lithuania, neoliberalism, feminist ethnography, social reproduction, care, everyday life, failure, resistance
11 March 2026, 15:00-16:00
Presentation of thesis
The Library lounge, floor 5, Alfred Nobels allé 11, Södertörn University, find us
English
Arranged by
The Library and Gender Studies at the School of Culture and Education, Södertörn University.
Contact
Sidinformation
- Page last updated
- 2026-02-06