Literature DB >> 20801994

Precarious beginnings: Gendered risk discourses in psychiatric research literature about postpartum depression.

Rebecca Godderis1.   

Abstract

The transition to motherhood in western society is particularly informed by risk-based scientific and medical discourses and, as a result, women are especially subject to rationalities and practices that are employed in the name of risk. The aim of this article is to examine the gendered risk discourses that are embedded in one aspect of medicalized mothering - the postpartum period. This article interrogates three key elements of the discursive construction of postpartum depression (PPD) in contemporary psychiatric research literature (approximately 1980-2007). Specifically, I examine how risk-based reasoning is incorporated into the concepts of the postpartum triad and the high-risk mother, and how arguments about why PPD is a 'significant social problem' create a tension between the rights of the mother and those of the child. By placing women in a position to manage certain types of risks related to the postpartum period, these discourses serve to responsibilize women and structure their subjectivities in gendered ways.This analysis contributes to a growing literature that investigates how assumptions about gender, race, class and sexuality are produced and re-produced through the notion of risk.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20801994     DOI: 10.1177/1363459309358595

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health (London)        ISSN: 1363-4593


  3 in total

Review 1.  Iterative generation of diagnostic categories through production and practice: the case of postpartum depression.

Authors:  Rebecca Godderis
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-12

2.  When the Ghosts Live in the Nursery: Postpartum Depression and the Grandmother-Mother-Baby Triad in Luzhou, China.

Authors:  Katherine A Mason
Journal:  Ethos       Date:  2020-09-18

3.  Dread and solace: Talking about perinatal mental health.

Authors:  Susan Law; Ilja Ormel; Stephanie Babinski; Donna Plett; Emilie Dionne; Hannah Schwartz; Linda Rozmovits
Journal:  Int J Ment Health Nurs       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 5.100

  3 in total

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