IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)

Midwifery is a word that, for many in this country, conjures up an image of superstitious old women delivering babies in primitive conditions of filth and ignorance. This strongly rooted and uniquely American idea owes its tenacious existence to the well-orchestrated campaign of the medical professi...

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Other Authors: SUSIE, DEBRA ANNE.
Format: Others
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Online Access: http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086032
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spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_755182019-07-01T04:10:48Z IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY) SUSIE, DEBRA ANNE. Florida State University Text 415 p. Midwifery is a word that, for many in this country, conjures up an image of superstitious old women delivering babies in primitive conditions of filth and ignorance. This strongly rooted and uniquely American idea owes its tenacious existence to the well-orchestrated campaign of the medical profession and state health officials, whose aim it was to eliminate the "midwife menace" within this century. Their goal was to make inroads for the more scientific and relatively new field of obstetrics. Through the mechanisms of the state, midwifery was successfully eradicated in three rational stages: education, regulation, and elimination. In phasing out midwifery, the state made incursions into a cultural tradition and permanently altered an ethnic institution. An important segment of women's (as well as southern and ethnic) history was forcibly ended, and one of the few long-respected, exclusively female roles of leadership was lost to American life. The existing literature on midwifery is predominantly statistical and anti-midwife (propaganda would not be too strong a word), gathered and publicized by the medical establishment in the early part of the century. Because of the underlying economic motives and the middle- and upper-class "professional" bias, the accuracy of this material is questionable. Neither does it address, in any depth, the role and personality of the old midwife from a cultural, historical perspective. This is the emphasis of this document, which includes a look at the process of state licensing and its effect on cultural institutions, original interviews with the few remaining Florida midwives or their daughters and granddaughters, and specific models from the licensing process in Florida, both past history and its present struggle to implement new midwifery legislation. On campus use only. Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-03, Section: A, page: 0816. Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1984. Women's Studies Black Studies http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086032 Dissertation Abstracts International AAI8509846 3086032 FSDT3086032 fsu:75518 http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A75518/datastream/TN/view/IN%20THE%20WAY%20OF%20OUR%20GRANDMOTHERS%3A%20A%20SOCIO-CULTURAL%20LOOK%20AT%20MODERN%20AMERICAN%20MIDWIFERY%20%28ORAL%20HISTORY%29.jpg
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Women's Studies
Black Studies
spellingShingle Women's Studies
Black Studies
IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
description Midwifery is a word that, for many in this country, conjures up an image of superstitious old women delivering babies in primitive conditions of filth and ignorance. This strongly rooted and uniquely American idea owes its tenacious existence to the well-orchestrated campaign of the medical profession and state health officials, whose aim it was to eliminate the "midwife menace" within this century. Their goal was to make inroads for the more scientific and relatively new field of obstetrics. Through the mechanisms of the state, midwifery was successfully eradicated in three rational stages: education, regulation, and elimination. In phasing out midwifery, the state made incursions into a cultural tradition and permanently altered an ethnic institution. An important segment of women's (as well as southern and ethnic) history was forcibly ended, and one of the few long-respected, exclusively female roles of leadership was lost to American life. The existing literature on midwifery is predominantly statistical and anti-midwife (propaganda would not be too strong a word), gathered and publicized by the medical establishment in the early part of the century. Because of the underlying economic motives and the middle- and upper-class "professional" bias, the accuracy of this material is questionable. Neither does it address, in any depth, the role and personality of the old midwife from a cultural, historical perspective. This is the emphasis of this document, which includes a look at the process of state licensing and its effect on cultural institutions, original interviews with the few remaining Florida midwives or their daughters and granddaughters, and specific models from the licensing process in Florida, both past history and its present struggle to implement new midwifery legislation. === Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-03, Section: A, page: 0816. === Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1984.
author2 SUSIE, DEBRA ANNE.
author_facet SUSIE, DEBRA ANNE.
title IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
title_short IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
title_full IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
title_fullStr IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
title_full_unstemmed IN THE WAY OF OUR GRANDMOTHERS: A SOCIO-CULTURAL LOOK AT MODERN AMERICAN MIDWIFERY (ORAL HISTORY)
title_sort in the way of our grandmothers: a socio-cultural look at modern american midwifery (oral history)
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086032
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