书评:詹妮弗·希尔的《诞生西方:落基山脉和平原上的母亲和助产士》

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Family History Pub Date : 2022-05-04 DOI:10.1177/03631990221097844
Cassandra Crisman
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Framing her work with the human life cycle: conception, birth, life, and death, Hill seeks to normalize childbirth while also emphasizing the historical importance it played in the colonization of the region. The high death rates of mothers who settled in states like Montana and Wyoming have been dismissed as a consequence of relying on midwives to guide the birthing process. Hill argues that it was not the incompetence of midwives that caused a high death rate, although this was the narrative that public health officials at the time pushed. Instead, the harsh material conditions and poverty that settler women faced contributed to high death rates during and after childbirth. While these conditions made childbirth risky, Hill praises the informal network of support that women created for its ability to manage healthcare. Birthing the West is an excellent addition to the historical field, as it elevates previously silenced voices while challenging major arguments about the American West. Often isolated in their rural settlements, women who settled in the Rockies and plains did not have the same access to healthcare that their urban counterparts had. Despite this challenge, solo birthing experiences were rare, as women formed a community to assist each other. Using personal letters, oral interviews, and journals, Hill maps a unique reciprocal economy that existed among settler women in this region. Still expected to maintain the home and farm, “chronically fatigued mothers living in isolation faced greater physical and emotional burdens than urban women” (58). Hill’s research shows that despite their stressful lives, plains and Rockies rural mothers were able to rely on each other in order to safely give birth and recover. Hill’s statistical data is from the Children’s Bureau, which under Julia Lathrop, interviewed just under five hundred new mothers in rural Montana during the Summer of 1917. According to their findings, the majority of maternity health care during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was provided by midwives. While some of these midwives had formal training, many gained their knowledge from personal experience and through assisting other women rather than formal education. In fact, it was rare for a woman who had never given birth to be a midwife. In the absence of a midwife, community women stepped in to offer any guidance they could, sometimes trading their time and efforts for material goods such as eggs and butter. Women would often stay for many days after the birth, assisting with the duties of the home that could not wait while the new mother recovered. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然所有的历史学家都经历过出生的过程,但很少有人注意到分娩的历史意义。也许这是因为出生是一个自然过程,是人类生命的一部分,而不是一种需要满足的医学条件,所以我们忽视了对它的研究。考古学家劳里·威尔基(Laurie Wilkie)断言,在她的研究领域中存在一种忽视母性的倾向,以此为基础,詹妮弗·希尔(Jennifer Hill)指出,在历史领域中也缺乏对生殖和分娩的关注。希尔在19世纪初对生育和生育的历史分析填补了这一学术空白,同时挑战了之前关于母亲和助产士的观点,以及美国西部整体的资本主义-个人主义叙事。她的作品以人类的生命周期为框架:受孕、出生、生命和死亡,希尔试图使分娩正常化,同时也强调了分娩在该地区殖民化中的历史重要性。在蒙大拿和怀俄明等州定居的母亲的高死亡率被认为是依赖助产士指导分娩过程的结果。希尔认为,并不是助产士的无能导致了高死亡率,尽管这是当时公共卫生官员所推崇的说法。相反,移民妇女所面临的恶劣物质条件和贫困造成了分娩期间和分娩后的高死亡率。虽然这些情况使分娩有风险,但希尔赞扬了妇女建立的非正式支持网络,因为它有能力管理医疗保健。《西部的诞生》是对历史领域的一个极好的补充,因为它提升了以前沉默的声音,同时挑战了关于美国西部的主要论点。居住在落基山脉和平原的妇女往往被隔离在农村定居点,她们无法获得与城市妇女相同的医疗保健服务。尽管面临这样的挑战,但独自分娩的经历很少,因为妇女们组成了一个社区,互相帮助。希尔利用私人信件、口头访谈和日记,描绘了该地区妇女定居者之间独特的互惠经济。"独居的长期疲劳的母亲仍然需要维持家庭和农场,她们比城市妇女面临更大的身体和情感负担"(58)。希尔的研究表明,尽管生活压力很大,平原和落基山脉农村的母亲能够相互依赖,以安全分娩和康复。希尔的统计数据来自儿童局,由朱莉娅·莱思罗普领导,1917年夏天在蒙大拿州农村采访了近500名新妈妈。根据他们的调查结果,19世纪末和20世纪初的大部分产妇保健是由助产士提供的。虽然其中一些助产士接受过正式培训,但许多助产士是通过个人经验和帮助其他妇女而不是通过正规教育获得知识的。事实上,从未生过孩子的女性很少成为助产士。在没有助产士的情况下,社区妇女会介入,尽可能地提供指导,有时会用她们的时间和精力来换取鸡蛋和黄油等物质商品。妇女通常会在孩子出生后呆上许多天,在新妈妈康复期间,协助完成家务。书评
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Book Review: Birthing the West: Mothers and Midwives in the Rockies and Plains by Jennifer Hill
While all historians came to be through the process of birth, little attention has been paid to the historical significance of childbirth. Perhaps this is because birth is a natural process, something that is part of human life, rather than a medical condition that needs to be met, that we have neglected to study it. Building upon archaeologist Laurie Wilkie’s assertion that there is a tendency to ignore motherhood in her field, Jennifer Hill points out there is a lack of focus on reproduction and childbirth in the field of history also. Hill’s historical analysis of reproduction and childbirth at the turn of the nineteenth century fills this gap in scholarship, while challenging previous ideas about mothers and midwives as well as the overall capitalist-individualist narrative of the American West. Framing her work with the human life cycle: conception, birth, life, and death, Hill seeks to normalize childbirth while also emphasizing the historical importance it played in the colonization of the region. The high death rates of mothers who settled in states like Montana and Wyoming have been dismissed as a consequence of relying on midwives to guide the birthing process. Hill argues that it was not the incompetence of midwives that caused a high death rate, although this was the narrative that public health officials at the time pushed. Instead, the harsh material conditions and poverty that settler women faced contributed to high death rates during and after childbirth. While these conditions made childbirth risky, Hill praises the informal network of support that women created for its ability to manage healthcare. Birthing the West is an excellent addition to the historical field, as it elevates previously silenced voices while challenging major arguments about the American West. Often isolated in their rural settlements, women who settled in the Rockies and plains did not have the same access to healthcare that their urban counterparts had. Despite this challenge, solo birthing experiences were rare, as women formed a community to assist each other. Using personal letters, oral interviews, and journals, Hill maps a unique reciprocal economy that existed among settler women in this region. Still expected to maintain the home and farm, “chronically fatigued mothers living in isolation faced greater physical and emotional burdens than urban women” (58). Hill’s research shows that despite their stressful lives, plains and Rockies rural mothers were able to rely on each other in order to safely give birth and recover. Hill’s statistical data is from the Children’s Bureau, which under Julia Lathrop, interviewed just under five hundred new mothers in rural Montana during the Summer of 1917. According to their findings, the majority of maternity health care during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was provided by midwives. While some of these midwives had formal training, many gained their knowledge from personal experience and through assisting other women rather than formal education. In fact, it was rare for a woman who had never given birth to be a midwife. In the absence of a midwife, community women stepped in to offer any guidance they could, sometimes trading their time and efforts for material goods such as eggs and butter. Women would often stay for many days after the birth, assisting with the duties of the home that could not wait while the new mother recovered. Book Reviews
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Family History is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes scholarly research from an international perspective concerning the family as a historical social form, with contributions from the disciplines of history, gender studies, economics, law, political science, policy studies, demography, anthropology, sociology, liberal arts, and the humanities. Themes including gender, sexuality, race, class, and culture are welcome. Its contents, which will be composed of both monographic and interpretative work (including full-length review essays and thematic fora), will reflect the international scope of research on the history of the family.
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