Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture

Some birth scholars (Melissa Cheney, Robbie Davis-Floyd, and Elizabeth Davis) have argued that there are two models of birth that value different kinds of knowledge. They assert that the “technocratic” model has been adopted by “mainstream” culture, which values reason and scientific knowledge. Mean...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jessie K. Tougas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Proposals Publishing Society 2016-04-01
Series:New Proposals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/186446
_version_ 1818677889169620992
author Jessie K. Tougas
author_facet Jessie K. Tougas
author_sort Jessie K. Tougas
collection DOAJ
description Some birth scholars (Melissa Cheney, Robbie Davis-Floyd, and Elizabeth Davis) have argued that there are two models of birth that value different kinds of knowledge. They assert that the “technocratic” model has been adopted by “mainstream” culture, which values reason and scientific knowledge. Meanwhile, the “countercultural” birth subculture, which has adopted a “holistic” model, values intuition and “body knowledge” instead. However, my research does not support this argument. Rather, the 119 birth stories I analyzed suggest that, even if the birth subculture rhetoric supports those scholars’ dichotomies, their birth experiences do not. Neither group appears to uniformly hold their respective values, thus weakening the original dichotomy between the “mainstream” group and the “countercultural” group. Moreover, I demonstrate how the dichotomy between reason and scientific knowledge on the one hand, and intuition and “body knowledge” on the other, is also inaccurate. Feminist epistemology also warns that this dichotomization undercuts a diversity of thinking styles by limiting them to just two.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T09:06:32Z
format Article
id doaj.art-3d3a41d159764ac2887834403c45eaaa
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1715-6718
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T09:06:32Z
publishDate 2016-04-01
publisher New Proposals Publishing Society
record_format Article
series New Proposals
spelling doaj.art-3d3a41d159764ac2887834403c45eaaa2022-12-21T21:55:26ZengNew Proposals Publishing SocietyNew Proposals1715-67182016-04-0182Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth SubcultureJessie K. Tougas0University of British ColumbiaSome birth scholars (Melissa Cheney, Robbie Davis-Floyd, and Elizabeth Davis) have argued that there are two models of birth that value different kinds of knowledge. They assert that the “technocratic” model has been adopted by “mainstream” culture, which values reason and scientific knowledge. Meanwhile, the “countercultural” birth subculture, which has adopted a “holistic” model, values intuition and “body knowledge” instead. However, my research does not support this argument. Rather, the 119 birth stories I analyzed suggest that, even if the birth subculture rhetoric supports those scholars’ dichotomies, their birth experiences do not. Neither group appears to uniformly hold their respective values, thus weakening the original dichotomy between the “mainstream” group and the “countercultural” group. Moreover, I demonstrate how the dichotomy between reason and scientific knowledge on the one hand, and intuition and “body knowledge” on the other, is also inaccurate. Feminist epistemology also warns that this dichotomization undercuts a diversity of thinking styles by limiting them to just two.https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/186446birth storieshomebirthnatural birthepistemologyreasonintuition
spellingShingle Jessie K. Tougas
Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
New Proposals
birth stories
homebirth
natural birth
epistemology
reason
intuition
title Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
title_full Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
title_fullStr Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
title_full_unstemmed Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
title_short Patching up False Dichotomies in the Birth Subculture
title_sort patching up false dichotomies in the birth subculture
topic birth stories
homebirth
natural birth
epistemology
reason
intuition
url https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/186446
work_keys_str_mv AT jessiektougas patchingupfalsedichotomiesinthebirthsubculture