Women as MothersA leading social anthropologist examines what being a mother means to a woman as a person , using examples from societies all over the world, and concludes that a great deal of what we call “maternal instinct” is culturally imposed and that there is no “right” or “wrong” way of mothering. -- Publisher description. |
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Page 30
... period . Later phases in child - rearing may pro- duce even more difficulties . Jessie Bernard , 13 describing low points in the natural history of parenthood ' which , because motherhood does not function in a vacuum , produce great ...
... period . Later phases in child - rearing may pro- duce even more difficulties . Jessie Bernard , 13 describing low points in the natural history of parenthood ' which , because motherhood does not function in a vacuum , produce great ...
Page 43
... period has become a much shorter part of each woman's life and fewer children are born within it . In the United States , for instance , the span of childbearing is now half as long as it was two generations ago . All this has ...
... period has become a much shorter part of each woman's life and fewer children are born within it . In the United States , for instance , the span of childbearing is now half as long as it was two generations ago . All this has ...
Page 147
... period , passing , by the avenue of birth , from uterogestation to exterogestation in a continuing and ever more complex relationship with the mother , who is best equipped to meet its needs.31 SYMBIOSIS OR SEPARATION We cannot assume ...
... period , passing , by the avenue of birth , from uterogestation to exterogestation in a continuing and ever more complex relationship with the mother , who is best equipped to meet its needs.31 SYMBIOSIS OR SEPARATION We cannot assume ...
Contents
Mothercraft or Motherhood? | 3 |
The Motherhood Trap | 16 |
Mothers in the Social System | 36 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
adult Africa antenatal clinic Ashley Montagu baby's Barbara Thompson become behaviour blood body born cent cervix Chaim Bermant child child-rearing childbearing childbirth contraceptive couples culture daughters delivered delivery doctor effect emotional expectant mother experience father feed feel female fertility girl give birth grandmother grow hospital human husband important induced infant interaction involved Jamaican Jewish kibbutz kind labouring woman live look male Margaret Mead marriage maternal menstruating ment midwives modern mother and baby motherhood nana newborn baby normal nuclear family obstetric obstetrician oxytocin parenthood parents patient peasant societies perhaps perinatal mortality person Pethidine placenta pre-industrial societies pregnancy pregnant woman rear relationship responsibility ritual role sexual share Sheila Kitzinger significant social sometimes taboo task tend things tion uterus West wife witches women young Zambia