In colonial India, medicalization of childbirth has been historically perceived as an attempt to ‘sanitise’ the zenana (secluded quarters of a respectable household inhabited by women) as the chief site of birthing practices and to replace the dhais (traditional birth attendants ) with trained midwives and qualified female doctors. This thesis has taken a broader view of the subject but in doing so, focusses on Bengal as the geographical area of study. It has argued that medicalization of childbirth in Bengal was preceded by the reconstitution of midwifery as an academic subject and a medical discipline at the Calcutta Medical College. The consequence was the gradual ascendancy of professionalized obstetrics that prioritised research, surgi...
198 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.My dissertation shows how hyg...
Background Regulation is a critical function in the governance of health workforces...
'Wellcome History' is an easy and regular channel of communication between all Wellcome historians. ...
In colonial India, medicalization of childbirth has been historically perceived as an attempt to ‘sa...
This paper offers an account of my three year contribution to the Research Project “Bodies in Transi...
This dissertation attempts to analyze how Western-style medical care for women was conceived and org...
This dissertation addresses two significant moments in the institutionalization of medical service i...
This dissertation investigates the centrality of gender in understanding the trajectory of science a...
The proposed study seeks to engage with two things: first, it intends to explore the historical traj...
The process of modernisation is witnessed all around the world. Modernity has impacted every aspect ...
This chapter examines rural midwifery as a form of knowledge that is undervalued by both Indian and ...
The thesis examines medical education and medical policies in British Bengal over the period 1800 t...
Pregnancy and childbirth complications are a leading cause of death and disability among women of re...
Hospital births were introduced to India during the colonial period but became a popular option duri...
Gender biases had denied women the opportunity to engage with the sciences and empirical learning un...
198 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.My dissertation shows how hyg...
Background Regulation is a critical function in the governance of health workforces...
'Wellcome History' is an easy and regular channel of communication between all Wellcome historians. ...
In colonial India, medicalization of childbirth has been historically perceived as an attempt to ‘sa...
This paper offers an account of my three year contribution to the Research Project “Bodies in Transi...
This dissertation attempts to analyze how Western-style medical care for women was conceived and org...
This dissertation addresses two significant moments in the institutionalization of medical service i...
This dissertation investigates the centrality of gender in understanding the trajectory of science a...
The proposed study seeks to engage with two things: first, it intends to explore the historical traj...
The process of modernisation is witnessed all around the world. Modernity has impacted every aspect ...
This chapter examines rural midwifery as a form of knowledge that is undervalued by both Indian and ...
The thesis examines medical education and medical policies in British Bengal over the period 1800 t...
Pregnancy and childbirth complications are a leading cause of death and disability among women of re...
Hospital births were introduced to India during the colonial period but became a popular option duri...
Gender biases had denied women the opportunity to engage with the sciences and empirical learning un...
198 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.My dissertation shows how hyg...
Background Regulation is a critical function in the governance of health workforces...
'Wellcome History' is an easy and regular channel of communication between all Wellcome historians. ...