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-List Of Titles -Breeding and feeding: a social history of mothers and medicine in Australia, 1880-1925

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/38533

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Title
Breeding and feeding: a social history of mothers and medicine in Australia, 1880-1925
Title
Social history of mothers and medicine in Australia, 1880-1925
Related
Australasian Digital Theses Program
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
2003
Author/Creator
Featherstone, Lisa
Description
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Humanities, Department of Modern History, 2003.
Description
Bibliography: p. 417-478.
Description
Introduction: breeding and feeding -- The medical man: sex, science and society -- Confined: women and obstetrics 1880-1899 -- The kindest cut? The caesarean section as turning point -- Reproduction in decline -- Resisting reproduction: women, doctors and abortion -- From obstetrics to paediatrics: the rise of the child -- The breast was best: medicine and maternal breastfeeding -- The deadly bottle and the dangers of the wet nurse: the "artificial" feeding of infants -- Surveillance and the mother -- Mothers and medicine: paradigms of continuity and change.
Description
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries saw profound changes in Australian attitudes towards maternity. Imbibed with discourses of pronatalism and eugenics, the production of infants became increasingly important to society and the state. Discourses proliferated on "breeding", and while it appeared maternity was exulted, the child, not the mother, was of ultimate interest. -- This thesis will examine the ways wider discourses of population impacted on childbearing, and very specifically the ways discussions of the nation impacted on medicine. Despite its apparent objectivity, medical science both absorbed and created pronatalism. Within medical ideology, where once the mother had been the point of interest, the primary focus of medical care, increasingly medical science focussed on the life of the infant, who was now all the more precious in the role of new life for the nation. -- While all childbirth and child-rearing advice was formed and mediated by such rhetoric, this thesis will examine certain key issues, including the rise of the caesarean section, the development of paediatrics and the turn to antenatal care. These turning points can be read as signifiers of attitudes towards women and the maternal body, and provide critical material for a reading of the complexities of representations of mothers in medical discourse.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
478 p
Subject Keyword
Motherhood -- Australia -- History
Subject Keyword
Maternal health services -- Australia -- History
Subject Keyword
Obstetrics -- Australia -- History
Subject Keyword
Obstetricians -- Australia -- Attitudes
Subject Keyword
Maternal and infant welfare -- Political aspects -- Australia -- History
Subject Keyword
Infants -- Nutrition -- Australia -- History
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Modern History

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/38533
Identifier
1336006
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Lisa Featherstone 2003.
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Thesis PhD

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