Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Birth Justice: From Obstetric Violence to Abolitionist Care [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 494 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2024
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9048562392
  • ISBN-13: 9789048562398
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 494 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2024
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9048562392
  • ISBN-13: 9789048562398
Teised raamatud teemal:
1. This is one of the first books on obstetric violence, which is a topic that is rapidly gaining attention over the last few years in academia, feminist activism, health care, and in public debate. And it is, to my knowledge, the first book on obstetric violence written by the same primary author, i.e., not an edited collection on the topic. 2. The book is written by an academic philosopher who is also a midwife and abortion activist, and is therefore compelling not only on the theoretical level, but also authoritative when it comes to professional experience and political expertise. 3. This is the first book that connects the currently very popular topic of reproductive justice with the currently even more popular topic of abolition. As such, it is right at the heart of current-day radical feminist thought. Also, it is part of a growing engagement with a topic of reproductive justice, which has seen only very few publications. It would certainly be one of the first in English in continental Europe. Reproductive injustice is an urgent global problem. We are faced with the increased criminalization of abortion, higher maternal and neonatal mortality rates for people of color, and more and more research addressing the structural nature of obstetric violence. In this collection of essays, the cause of reproductive injustice is understood as the institutionalized isolation of (potentially) pregnant people, making them vulnerable for bio- and necropolitical disciplination and control.
The central thesis of this book is that reproductive justice must be achieved through a radical reappropriation of relationality in reproductive care to safeguard the access to knowledge and care needed for safe bodily self-determination. Through empirical research as well as decolonial, feminist, midwifery, and Black theory, reproductive justice is reimagined as abolitionist care, grounded in the abolition of authoritative obstetric institutions, state control of reproduction, and restrictive abortion laws in favor of community practices that are truly relational.

Arvustused

This book provides startling new directions in midwifery and feminist scholarship and establishes Rodante van der Waal as a leading scholar in critical midwifery studies. Its central focus, obstetric violence a current urgent concern in maternity care is meticulously examined beyond the confines of the maternity sector and linked to the institutional violence inherent within the biopolitics of the modern state. Resistance to this violence is positioned not as an emancipatory struggle for legitimacy, but as a reimagination of reproduction and reproductive justice to-come, through the adoption of abolitionist radical care. Relationality as a disruptive practice of care, and midwifery by its commitment to relationality, are identified as philosophical and practical contributions to reproductive justice, while also destabilizing the grounds of midwifery idealism and essentialism. Rigorously argued, and drawing on a wealth of interdisciplinarities, the valuable and transformative perceptions contained in Birth Justice will speak strongly to academic readers, activists, care professionals, and health care policy makers. It is a call to arms, in the most profound sense to the arms of care, of community, of justice. Elizabeth Newnham, PhD, Associate Professor, Flinders University, author of Towards the Humanisation of Birth

Birth Justice is a must-read book that defies disciplinary boundaries, inspires the imagination, and nourishes resistant thinking. In this carefully curated collection of articles, intermezzo interludes, symposia, and reflections, Rodante van der Waal deftly weaves together theoretical, personal, narrative, and creative modes of inquiry. Beautifully and attentively written, the end-result is a vibrant philosophical meditation on birth, abolitionist care, and the work of gestational justice. Deeply thought-provoking, honest, and humane this book is intellectual nourishment. Dr Rachelle Chadwick, Senior Lecturer in Gender-based Violence, University of Bristol, author of Bodies that Birth: Vitalizing Birth Politics

The Netherlands was the last industrialized country to lose independent midwifery to obstetric control, to see birth turned into one more hospital procedure done ON not BY the mother. This brilliant, sad but true, book documents the consequences. Barbara Katz Rothman, PhD, author of In Labor , of The Tentative Pregnancy and most recently, The Biomedical Empire (Stanford University Press)

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Theoretical Framework. Reproductive Justice To-Come
Part I. Obstetric Violence and Obstetric Racism in the Netherlands
Intermezzo. A peoples tribunal on obstetric violence and obstetric racism
Chapter
1. Shroud waving self-determination: a qualitative analysis of the
moral and epistemic dimensions of obstetric violence in the Netherlands
Chapter
2. Obstetric racism as necropolitical disinvestment of care: how
uneven reproduction in the Netherlands is effectuated through linguistic
racism, exoticization, and stereotypes
Chapter
3. Obstetric violence within students rite of passage: the
reproduction of the obstetric subject and its racialised (m)other
Part II. The Separation of Reproductive Relationality Intermezzo. Abortion
scene from Portrait de la Jeune Fille en Feu
Chapter
4. Hacking Reproductive Justice: Solomons judgment and the captive
maternal
Chapter
5. The dead baby card and the early modern accusation of
infanticide: Situating obstetric violence in the bio- and necropolitics of
reproduction
Chapter
6. Reimagining relationality for reproductive care: Understanding
obstetric violence as separation
Part III. Abolitionist Care
Chapter
7. The undercommons of childbirth and their abolitionist ethic of
care: a study into obstetric violence among mothers, midwives (in training),
and doulas
Chapter
8. Obstetric Violence: An Intersectional Refraction through Abolition
Feminism
Chapter
9. Undercommoning anthrogenesis: abolitionist care for reproductive
justice
Part IV. Reimagining Reproduction
Chapter
10. Specter(s) of care: A symposium on midwifery, relationality, and
reproductive justice to-come
Chapter
11. Somatophilic reproductive justice: on technology, feminist
biological materialism, and midwifery thinking
Chapter
12. When the egg breaks, the chicken bleeds: unsettling coloniality
through fertility in Lispectors The Passion According to G.H. and The
Chronicles
Conclusion. Birth Justice
Bibliography
Rodante van der Waal is a midwife and philosopher. Their academic articles have been published in a.o. Frontiers, Angelaki, Agenda, Feminist Anthropology, Feminist Theory, PLoS ONE, Social Text, Birth, Technophany Nursing Ethics and Violence Against Women.