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Bearing meaning : the language of birth / Robbie Pfeufer Kahn.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [1995]Copyright date: ©1995Description: x, 441 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0252021711
  • 9780252021718
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.8743 20
LOC classification:
  • HQ759 .K34 1995
Contents:
1. The Plains of Troy and Bastille Day 1972 -- 2. Writing the Body of Birth and Patriarchy -- 3. The Body of Birth Reconsidered -- 4. The Place of Birth and Social Change -- 5. Myths of Origins and the Development of Patriarchy -- 6. From Julius Caesar to Taurus the Bull -- 7. Obstetric Strategies -- 8. Unsavory Saviors -- 9. Narrative Interruption -- 10. Historical Foremothers -- 11. Taking Our Maternal Bodies Back -- 12. Lessons of the Milk -- --
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. The Plains of Troy and Bastille Day 1972 -- 2. Writing the Body of Birth and Patriarchy -- 3. The Body of Birth Reconsidered -- 4. The Place of Birth and Social Change -- 5. Myths of Origins and the Development of Patriarchy -- 6. From Julius Caesar to Taurus the Bull -- 7. Obstetric Strategies -- 8. Unsavory Saviors -- 9. Narrative Interruption -- 10. Historical Foremothers -- 11. Taking Our Maternal Bodies Back -- 12. Lessons of the Milk -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: A passionate placement of childbearing at the core of human culture and society, Bearing Meaning is that rare combination of warm and genuine experience with profound, important scholarship. From Homer to obstetric texts to Our Bodies, Ourselves, and where the humanities and social sciences overlap and intertwine, Robbie Pfeufer Kahn has crafted a beautiful book that awards the meaning of childbearing to all, not just to women or to families with children. Taking into account how the politics of patriarchy has sought to define and control the birth process, Kahn liberates and releases this central human experience into the heart of society and culture where it can be shared, enjoyed, and understood in greater depth than it has ever been before.Summary: As personal and touching as it is far-reaching and analytical, Bearing Meaning is fresh, original, and exciting, moving effortlessly among textual analyses, social theories, and the invaluable experience of motherhood. Kahn makes an unprecedented contribution to the understanding of the maternal in culture and society - which will, in turn, have a powerful impact not only on the reading and teaching of standard materials on birth and motherhood but on the rethinking of social reform as well.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book North Campus North Campus Main Collection 306.8743 KAH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A149351B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 395-426) and index.

1. The Plains of Troy and Bastille Day 1972 -- 2. Writing the Body of Birth and Patriarchy -- 3. The Body of Birth Reconsidered -- 4. The Place of Birth and Social Change -- 5. Myths of Origins and the Development of Patriarchy -- 6. From Julius Caesar to Taurus the Bull -- 7. Obstetric Strategies -- 8. Unsavory Saviors -- 9. Narrative Interruption -- 10. Historical Foremothers -- 11. Taking Our Maternal Bodies Back -- 12. Lessons of the Milk -- --

Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. The Plains of Troy and Bastille Day 1972 -- 2. Writing the Body of Birth and Patriarchy -- 3. The Body of Birth Reconsidered -- 4. The Place of Birth and Social Change -- 5. Myths of Origins and the Development of Patriarchy -- 6. From Julius Caesar to Taurus the Bull -- 7. Obstetric Strategies -- 8. Unsavory Saviors -- 9. Narrative Interruption -- 10. Historical Foremothers -- 11. Taking Our Maternal Bodies Back -- 12. Lessons of the Milk -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- Index.

A passionate placement of childbearing at the core of human culture and society, Bearing Meaning is that rare combination of warm and genuine experience with profound, important scholarship. From Homer to obstetric texts to Our Bodies, Ourselves, and where the humanities and social sciences overlap and intertwine, Robbie Pfeufer Kahn has crafted a beautiful book that awards the meaning of childbearing to all, not just to women or to families with children. Taking into account how the politics of patriarchy has sought to define and control the birth process, Kahn liberates and releases this central human experience into the heart of society and culture where it can be shared, enjoyed, and understood in greater depth than it has ever been before.

As personal and touching as it is far-reaching and analytical, Bearing Meaning is fresh, original, and exciting, moving effortlessly among textual analyses, social theories, and the invaluable experience of motherhood. Kahn makes an unprecedented contribution to the understanding of the maternal in culture and society - which will, in turn, have a powerful impact not only on the reading and teaching of standard materials on birth and motherhood but on the rethinking of social reform as well.

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