This thesis demonstrates how literary and medical authors explored changing concepts of childbirth and reproductive medicine between the years 1737 and 1798. Considerable changes took place during this period that transformed birth from a social rite of passage into a medical event. Questions such as who and what was involved in reproduction, how childbirth was managed by individuals and communities, as well as how common understanding about these matters were reached, were brought to the fore in a way that they had never before been raised. A key means by which these ideas were communicated was through the rapidly developing print market with its overlapping interests in literature and medicine. Scholarship of medical humanities and medica...
Maternal imagination is the notion that a pregnant woman could alter the development of her foetus w...
My thesis is a historical and cultural study of how the womb was visualized in Britain circa 1660-17...
In this dissertation I contend the female midwives and childbearing women did not passively accept t...
Not until the eighteenth century was the image of the tender, full-time mother invented. This image ...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
In this project I examine eighteenth-century literary representations of the pregnant or birthing fe...
Birth stories, as numerous scholars have observed, are central aspects of maternal identity. Such st...
This thesis investigates representations of the pregnant body in works by women writers in the perio...
Midwives had long been considered experts in pregnancy and childbirth prior to the Scientific Revolu...
This thesis analyzes medical manuals published in England between 1500 and 1770 to trace developing ...
Eve Keller locates the emergence of the masculinist modern, liberal self in seventeenth century em...
Eve Keller locates the emergence of the masculinist modern, liberal self in seventeenth century em...
Midwifery is an ancient profession that boasts the proud tradition of providing care for women and ...
Maternal imagination is the notion that a pregnant woman could alter the development of her foetus w...
My thesis is a historical and cultural study of how the womb was visualized in Britain circa 1660-17...
In this dissertation I contend the female midwives and childbearing women did not passively accept t...
Not until the eighteenth century was the image of the tender, full-time mother invented. This image ...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
This dissertation employs a feminist theoretical lens in exploring the gendered uses of pregnancy an...
In this project I examine eighteenth-century literary representations of the pregnant or birthing fe...
Birth stories, as numerous scholars have observed, are central aspects of maternal identity. Such st...
This thesis investigates representations of the pregnant body in works by women writers in the perio...
Midwives had long been considered experts in pregnancy and childbirth prior to the Scientific Revolu...
This thesis analyzes medical manuals published in England between 1500 and 1770 to trace developing ...
Eve Keller locates the emergence of the masculinist modern, liberal self in seventeenth century em...
Eve Keller locates the emergence of the masculinist modern, liberal self in seventeenth century em...
Midwifery is an ancient profession that boasts the proud tradition of providing care for women and ...
Maternal imagination is the notion that a pregnant woman could alter the development of her foetus w...
My thesis is a historical and cultural study of how the womb was visualized in Britain circa 1660-17...
In this dissertation I contend the female midwives and childbearing women did not passively accept t...