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Qualitative Inquiry
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Women's Lived Experiences With Pregnancy and Midwifery in a Medicalized and Fetocentric Context

Six Short Stories

Diana C. Parry

University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

Increasingly, women are subjected to examination throughout pregnancy and childbirth. Historically, pregnancy and childbirth were considered a natural, normal, woman-centered event. Presently, they are conceptualized as a dangerous time when a woman's health and that of her baby are at risk, thus requiring constant medical monitoring and intervention, often under the control of male physicians. As a consequence, women negotiate their experiences with pregnancy in a medicalized and fetocentric ideological context. The collection of stories in this article reveals the social and cultural contexts of women's lived experiences with pregnancy through a feminist lens. Short stories are used to give voice to women's experiences and to assert that women are the experts of their own health and well-being. Moreover, the use of narratives contributes to the dialogue of creative analytic practice and representation fostered by qualitative inquiry and feminist epistemologies.

Key Words: pregnancy • midwifery • resistance

Qualitative Inquiry, Vol. 12, No. 3, 459-471 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1077800406286225


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