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Exploring the Dirty Side of Women's Health

Editat de Mavis Kirkham
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 dec 2006
In this book, a team of international contributors examine bodies, leakage and boundaries, illuminating the contradictions and dilemmas in women’s healthcare.
Using the concept of pollution, this book highlights how women and health issues are categorised, and health workers and women are confined to roles and places defined as socially appropriate. The book explores in-depth current and historical practices, such as:
  • childbirth and midwifery practice
  • policies and social practices around breastfeeding
  • gynaecological nursing, female incontinence and sexually transmitted infections
  • miscarriages and termination of pregnancy.
Addressing things out of place, from the idea of ‘dirty work’ to feeling ‘dirty’, from diagnoses that disrupt our self-image to beliefs and practices which undermine health service provision, this book uses the contradictions in our thinking around pollution and power to stimulate thinking around women’s health.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780415383240
ISBN-10: 0415383242
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 4 b/w images and 1 table
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Professional

Cuprins

1. Language and Status: The Disappearing and Reappearing ‘Midwife’  2. Genetic Traits as Pollution: The Case of 'White English' Carriers of Sickle Cell/Thalassaemia Traits  3. Midwives: Defiling Women!  Section 2: Leakage and Labelling  4. Containing the Leaking Body: Female Incontinence and Formal Health Care  5. Leaky Bodies and Boundaries: Older Women and Early Miscarriage  6. "I Just Felt Really Dirty": Women’s Responses to a Diagnosis of Chlamydial Infection  Section 3: Breastfeeding as Pollution  7. ‘Resisting the Gaze’: The Subversive Nature of Breastfeeding  8. The Pollution of Objective Scientific Practice by Anecdotal Stories of Personal, Vicarious or Cultural Experience: The Denial of Embodied Knowledge  9. Not in Public Please: Breastfeeding as Dirty Work  10. "Milk for Africa and the Neighbourhood" but Socially Isolated  11. Breastfeeding: A Time for Caution  Section 4: Midwives and Dirt  12. Birth Dirt  13. Pollution and Safety – Controls of a Secular World  14. Drained and Dumped On: The Generation and Accumulation of Emotional Toxic Waste in Community Midwifery  Section 5: History: Containing Birth Pollution  15. A Clean Front Passage: Dirt, Douches and Disinfectants at St Helen’s Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand, 1907-1922  16. The Thanksgiving of Women after Childbirth: A Blessing in Disguise?  Section 6: Dais  17. Rethinking ‘Pollution’— Understanding ‘Narak’  18. Dais’ Work in Gujarat, India  19. The Dirt has to Come Away  20. Pollution and Women in Sickness, Health, Birth and Work

Notă biografică

Mavis Kirkham is Professor of Midwifery at the University of Sheffield. Here current research interests are in why midwives leave the service, and why some of them stay. She has edited three other books in the field.

Descriere

A team of international contributors give new insights into the key issues surrounding women's health, social anthropology and midwifery. They examine bodies, leakage and boundaries, illuminating the contradictions and dilemmas in women’s healthcare.