Gender, Power Relations and Childbirth : Negotiations with Cultural and Biomedical Discourses
By: Kant, Aastha.
Publisher: Jaipur Rawat Publications 2019Description: xvii, , 212p.ISBN: 9788131610626.Subject(s): Gender Discrimination -- Sex Discrimination -- Biomedical DiscourseDDC classification: 305.3 Summary: Gender, Power Relations and Childbirth: Negotiations with Cultural and Biomedical Discourses explores different ways in which women from a resettlement colony mobilize knowledge, resources and support systems in negotiating patriarchal control of their pregnant and birthing bodies. It analyses the way women use plural and often contradictory discourses of cultural and biomedical knowledge simultaneously, to deal with the various societal demands over their pregnancies and childbirths. It addresses questions such as how do women manoeuvre traditional and institutional exercise of power and strategize their experiences? Their strategies of compliance and resistance are explored to gain insights into the everyday experience of gender-power relations and women’s continuous efforts to counter their subordination.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 305.3 KAN-G (Browse shelf) | Available | 50430 |
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305.3 HEL-P Psychology Of Gender | 305.3 ING-R Rising tide: Gender equality and cultural change around the world | 305.3 INS-; Social reform, gender and the state: Papers | 305.3 KAN-G Gender, Power Relations and Childbirth | 305.3 KIR-W Women, men and identity politics | 305.3 KRA-S Sociology of gender: a brief introduction | 305.3 LOM-S The symbolic representation of gender : |
The book is an outcome of doctoral thesis sponsored and financially supported by the Indian Council of Social Science Research, New Delhi
includes bibliography and index
Gender, Power Relations and Childbirth: Negotiations with Cultural and Biomedical Discourses explores different ways in which women from a resettlement colony mobilize knowledge, resources and support systems in negotiating patriarchal control of their pregnant and birthing bodies. It analyses the way women use plural and often contradictory discourses of cultural and biomedical knowledge simultaneously, to deal with the various societal demands over their pregnancies and childbirths. It addresses questions such as how do women manoeuvre traditional and institutional exercise of power and strategize their experiences? Their strategies of compliance and resistance are explored to gain insights into the everyday experience of gender-power relations and women’s continuous efforts to counter their subordination.
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