The skill, knowledge, or practice of being a father; the art of fatherhood and raising children.
Compound of 'father' and 'craft,' where 'craft' originally meant skill or knowledge in a particular field (as in 'witchcraft' or 'witchcraft'). It mirrors the earlier term 'motherhood' and reflects 19th-century interest in parenting as a learnable skill.
The word 'fathercraft' is rare today, but it was a Victorian term reflecting a revolutionary idea: that fathering wasn't just biological but something you could actually learn and get better at—now we call that parenting.
Compounds like 'fathercraft' (or 'motherhood,' 'mothering') gendered parental skill and knowledge. Historically, paternal care was rendered invisible as 'instinct' or naturalized only in mothers, while father-specific language elevated parenting as a teachable 'craft'—elevating one gender's parental role.
Use 'parenting,' 'co-parenting,' or 'childcare expertise' to center parental competence across all caregivers regardless of gender.
["parenting","co-parenting","childcare expertise","caregiving skill"]
Mothers and non-binary caregivers have designed and refined parenting practices for millennia; gendered language has historically erased their expertise as 'natural' rather than skilled.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.