Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House

AbstractAmi McKay’s The Birth House aptly captures how with the advent of obstetric technologies, medical interventions escalated the proportion of women who encounter obstetric violence as part of normal procedures resulting invariably in birth trauma. The novel portrays the dehumanizing experience...

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Main Authors: Swathi Mohan, Manali Karmakar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-12-01
Series:Cogent Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311983.2023.2249281
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author Swathi Mohan
Manali Karmakar
author_facet Swathi Mohan
Manali Karmakar
author_sort Swathi Mohan
collection DOAJ
description AbstractAmi McKay’s The Birth House aptly captures how with the advent of obstetric technologies, medical interventions escalated the proportion of women who encounter obstetric violence as part of normal procedures resulting invariably in birth trauma. The novel portrays the dehumanizing experiences of birthing women under the care of a physician who represents the single-sighted perspective of obstetric care, undermining the uniqueness of each delivery experience. The paper analyzes how this narrative captures the phenomenology of obstetric violence during the early twentieth century. The paper aims to study how the novel analyzes the issues such as lack of agency, privacy, and dehumanization experienced by birth mothers in the maternity ward. This paper also aims to discover how the novel advocates for a positive birth experience emphasizing the uniqueness of each birth mother’s experiences. By employing the concepts of obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, pain, privacy, medical colonization, and positive birth experience, this paper explores the epistemological friction in the notion of maternal care between the indigenous midwives and the traditional Western medical discourse to showcase the relationships among maternal care, obstetric violence, birth trauma, and positive birth experiences. The paper also critiques the novel for its uncritical polarized portrayal of treatments offered by the midwives and physicians.
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spelling doaj.art-a5d81e2d45f04b58a6c2d2fe2d4d54f52023-12-03T02:14:21ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Arts & Humanities2331-19832023-12-0110110.1080/23311983.2023.2249281Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth HouseSwathi Mohan0Manali Karmakar1Research Scholar, School of Social Sciences and Languages, Division of English, Vellore Institute of Technology, Chennai, IndiaResearch Scholar, School of Social Sciences and Languages, Division of English, Vellore Institute of Technology, Chennai, IndiaAbstractAmi McKay’s The Birth House aptly captures how with the advent of obstetric technologies, medical interventions escalated the proportion of women who encounter obstetric violence as part of normal procedures resulting invariably in birth trauma. The novel portrays the dehumanizing experiences of birthing women under the care of a physician who represents the single-sighted perspective of obstetric care, undermining the uniqueness of each delivery experience. The paper analyzes how this narrative captures the phenomenology of obstetric violence during the early twentieth century. The paper aims to study how the novel analyzes the issues such as lack of agency, privacy, and dehumanization experienced by birth mothers in the maternity ward. This paper also aims to discover how the novel advocates for a positive birth experience emphasizing the uniqueness of each birth mother’s experiences. By employing the concepts of obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, pain, privacy, medical colonization, and positive birth experience, this paper explores the epistemological friction in the notion of maternal care between the indigenous midwives and the traditional Western medical discourse to showcase the relationships among maternal care, obstetric violence, birth trauma, and positive birth experiences. The paper also critiques the novel for its uncritical polarized portrayal of treatments offered by the midwives and physicians.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311983.2023.2249281obstetric violencematernity carebirth traumamidwivesphysiciansliterary narratives
spellingShingle Swathi Mohan
Manali Karmakar
Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
Cogent Arts & Humanities
obstetric violence
maternity care
birth trauma
midwives
physicians
literary narratives
title Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
title_full Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
title_fullStr Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
title_full_unstemmed Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
title_short Obstetric violence, birth trauma, agency, and care in Ami McKay’s The Birth House
title_sort obstetric violence birth trauma agency and care in ami mckay s the birth house
topic obstetric violence
maternity care
birth trauma
midwives
physicians
literary narratives
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311983.2023.2249281
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AT manalikarmakar obstetricviolencebirthtraumaagencyandcareinamimckaysthebirthhouse