How could the professional triumph of man-midwifery and contemporary
tales of pregnant men, rabbit-breeding mothers, and meddling midwives
in eighteenth-century Britain help construct the emergence of modern
corporate and individual identities? By uncovering long-lost tales and
artefacts about sexuality, birth, and popular culture, Lisa Forman
Cody argues that Enlightenment Britons understood themselves and their
relationship to others through their experiences and beliefs about the
reproductive body. Birthing the Nation traces two intertwined
narratives that shaped eighteenth-century British life: the
development of the modern British nation, and the emergence of the
male expert as the pre-eminent authority over matters of sexual
behaviour, reproduction, and childbirth. By taking seriously
contemporary caricatures, jokes, and rumours that used gender, birth,
and family to make claims about religious, ethnic and national
identity, Cody illuminates an entirely new view of the
eighteenth-century public sphere as focused on the bodily and the
bizarre. In a monarchy arbitrated by its official religion, regulation
of reproduction and childbirth was vital to the very stability of
British political authority and the coherence of British culture,
challenged as it was by Catholicism, the French Revolution, and social
change. In the late seventeenth century, the English feared the power
of female midwives to control the destiny of the royal family, yet
men-midwives and male experts had hardly proved their superiority to
manage the successful birth of children. By the mid-eighteenth
century, however, male midwives became experts over the domestic world
of pregnancy and childbirth, largely replacing female midwives among
the middling and elite families. Cody suggests that these new
professionals provided a new model for masculine comportment and
emergent intimate relationships within the middle-class and elite
home. Most surprisingly, Cody has discovered many interconnections
between obstetrics and politics, and shows how male experts
transformed what had once been the private, feminine domain of birth
and midwifery into topics of public importance and universal interest,
leading even Adam Smith and Edmund Burke to attend lectures on
obstetrical anatomy. This is the first book to place the
eighteenth-century shift from female midwives to male midwives as the
dominant experts over childbirth in a larger cultural and political
context. Cody illuminates how eighteenth-century Britons understood
and symbolized political, national, and religious affiliation through
the experiences of the body, sex, and birth. In turn, she takes
seriously how the political arguments and rhetoric of the age were not
always made on disembodied, rational terms, but instead referenced
deep cultural beliefs about gender, reproduction, and the family.
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Sex, Science, and the Conception of Eighteenth-Century Britons
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191514975
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter