Difference between revisions of "Week 6 Questions/Comments-327 11"
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Ashleyv456 (Talk | contribs) (→SUSANNA HASWELL ROWSON, Charlotte: A Tale of Truth, 1794) |
(→Catherine Scholten, "On the Importance of the Obstetrick Art" 1977) |
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Interesting how men perceived their exclusion from midwifery as prejudice, but thought not at all about female exlusion from just about every other career. Also, once the numbers of men practicing midwifery/obstetrics surpassed the number of women, midwifery is finally adopted by universities for study as a branch of medicine. I do have a question regarding sexual taboos that the essay did not adequately answer: if women were not comfortable with male midwives (cutting the umbilical cord under the covers with the lights off? come on!), and husbands were not comfortable with exposure of their wives' bodies to male midwives, and female midwives were not happy with the change, who exactly supported it? --Stef L. | Interesting how men perceived their exclusion from midwifery as prejudice, but thought not at all about female exlusion from just about every other career. Also, once the numbers of men practicing midwifery/obstetrics surpassed the number of women, midwifery is finally adopted by universities for study as a branch of medicine. I do have a question regarding sexual taboos that the essay did not adequately answer: if women were not comfortable with male midwives (cutting the umbilical cord under the covers with the lights off? come on!), and husbands were not comfortable with exposure of their wives' bodies to male midwives, and female midwives were not happy with the change, who exactly supported it? --Stef L. | ||
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| + | When viewing this shift from a midwife centered birthing system to one that was purely medical, it seems as though it would be would be an important step in the advancement of women's health. However, even though the intensions of some of these male physicians may have been true to the patient it appears that such help was unwanted and even feared by the female community. Male physicians saw this field of medicine as one that had been long neglected and needed to be addressed in order to bring birthing practices from a "primitive society" to one that was civilized. Women on the other hand did not see such a need for male interference and viewed this shift as distressing and corrupting the female communal experience of child birth. Was it that women were alright with living in this "primitive society", in regards to birthing, in order to retain their social and cultural lives as females? -- Rachel T. | ||
== JUDITH SARGENT MURRAY, Story of Margaretta, 1798 == | == JUDITH SARGENT MURRAY, Story of Margaretta, 1798 == | ||