Literature DB >> 2389154

The role of obstetrical rituals in the resolution of cultural anomaly.

R E Davis-Floyd.   

Abstract

To a technological society like that of the United States, the natural process of childbirth presents special conceptual dilemmas, as it calls into perpetual question any boundaries American culture tries to delineate between itself and nature. The author builds on previous works in which she has argued that the American core value system centers around science and technology, the institutions through which these are disseminated into society, and the patriarchal system through which these institutions are managed. A constant reminder that babies come from women and nature, not from technology and culture, childbirth confronts American society with practical, procedural dilemmas: How to create a sense of cultural control over birth, a natural process resistant to such control? How to make birth, a powerfully female phenomenon, reinforce, instead of undermine, the patriarchal system upon which American society is still based? How to turn the natural and individual birth process into a cultural rite of passage which successfully inculcates the dominant core value system into the initiates? In the absence of universal baptism, how to enculturate a non-cultural baby? Some of the dilemmas discussed in this article are universal problems presented by the birth process to all human societies; others are specific to American culture. Each contains within it a fundamental paradox, an opposition which must be culturally reconciled lest the anomaly of its existence undermine the fragile technology-based conceptual system in terms of which American society organizes itself. After a brief discussion of the history of this technological paradigm, the author analyzes eight of the dilemmas presented by childbirth to American society, demonstrating how they have been neatly resolved by obstetrical rituals specifically designed to removed birth's conceptual threat to the technological model by making birth appear, through technological means, to confirm instead of challenge the basic tenets of that model. From this perspective, routinely used obstetrical procedures such as electronic fetal monitoring, episiotomies, the lithotomy position, and even the Cesarean section emerge as rational ritual responses to the conflicts between reality as American society has constructed it, and the physiological realities of birth.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2389154     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(90)90060-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  5 in total

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Authors:  Dominique P Béhague
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2002-12

2.  Risky business: framing childbirth in hospital settings.

Authors:  Bernice L Hausman
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2005

3.  Hospitalization of deliveries: the change of place of birth in Denmark and Sweden from the late nineteenth century to 1970.

Authors:  S Vallgårda
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 1.419

4.  Sharing bodies: the impact of the biomedical model of pregnancy on women's embodied experiences of the transition to motherhood.

Authors:  Elena Neiterman
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2013-10

5.  The lived experience of knowing in childbirth.

Authors:  Jane Staton Savage
Journal:  J Perinat Educ       Date:  2006
  5 in total

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