![Literary Friction artwork](https://is3-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts113/v4/3c/ec/bf/3cecbf16-4452-688a-ecaa-57bf70ad29a0/mza_7768252704205208517.jpg/100x100bb.jpg)
Minisode Twenty-Eight: Fathers
Literary Friction
English - March 16, 2022 09:23 - 46 minutes - 106 MB - ★★★★★ - 180 ratingsArts politics comedy interview entrepreneurship business health news culture entrepreneur leadership Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Previous Episode: East Side Voices with Helena Lee and Will Harris
Next Episode: Satire with Pola Oloixarac
Our last minisode was about mothers, so in the name of equity (and riffing on Octavia’s statement that she’d rather be a dad) we’re extending the conversation to fathers in literature. The figure of the father has its own heavy symbolism, wrapped up with masculinity and the need to provide, and literature is filled with fathers from the admirable to the monstrous. We ask whether we expect as much from fathers in life and in books, and whether being a ‘bad’ father might pose a different kind of threat. Plus we get into the father memoir, how expectations are shifting, and the power of shame in creating more equal parenting roles. Enjoy!