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Feminism, Breasts and Breast-Feeding PDF

276 Pages·1995·26.535 MB·English
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Feminism, Breasts and Breast-Feeding Pam Carter FEMINISM, BREASTS AND BREAST-FEEDING Also by Pam Carter CHANGING SOCIAL WORK AND WELFARE (editor with T. Jeffs and M. K. Smith) SOCIAL WORKING (editor with T. Jeffs and M. K. Smith) Feminism, Breasts and Breast-Feeding Pam Carter Senior Lecturer, Sociology Division University of Northumbria Newcastle upon Tyne Foreword by Mary Evans Consultant Editor: Jo Campling © Pamela Carter 1995 Foreword © Mary Evans 1995 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London wn 4LP. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The author has asserted her right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Published by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10010 Companies and representatives throughout the world PALGRAVE MACMILLAN is the global academic imprint of the Palgrave Macmillan division of St. Martin's Press, LLC and of Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. Macmillan® is a registered trademark in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries. Palgrave is a registered trademark in the European Union and other countries. Outside North America ISBN 978-0-333-62311-4 ISBN 978-0-230-38953-3 (eBook) DOI 10.1057/9780230389533 Inside North America ISBN 978-0-312-12625-4 This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Contents Foreword by Mary Evans Vll Acknowledgements IX 1 The Great Breast-feeding Question 1 Infant feeding: mainstream policy concerns 1 Change or continuity? 5 But why don't they breast-feed? 7 Women's lived experiences of infant feeding: the missing dimension? 11 Feminism and breast-feeding 14 Feminism and reproduction 17 Social contexts and infant feeding 21 Which feminism? 24 Sexual difference versus gender neutrality 27 The category of women 32 Conclusion 32 2 A Tidal Wave of Good Advice 34 Infant feeding before 1900 35 Ignorance and carelessness 1900-18 41 i. Infant welfare movements 43 ii. Support for motherhood 46 iii. Infant feeding and medicalization 48 Between the wars: the politics of femininity 49 World War Two: putting milk into babies 54 1945-1970: housewives and mothers: a job to be done 56 1970 to the present: breast-feeding centre stage 59 Current literature and debate 62 3 Infant Feeding in Women's Lives 71 Breast and bottle feeding 'categories' 73 Coping with the 'working conditions' 78 Are 'breast-feeders' different? 88 Continuity and change: what is a generation? 89 Different memories: Asian women's stories 95 Conclusions 100 v vi Contents 4 Public Space and Private Bodies 106 Managing women's bodies 106 Sexualizing private and public space 115 Time, space and women's work 121 Rethinking private/public boundaries: the concept of femininity 127 5 Breast-feeding, Sex and Bodies 133 Sexuality in the breast-feeding literature 135 Women's experiences of their bodies 140 Breasts and discourses of sexuality 149 Creating alternative discourses of sexuality 154 6 'She said the baby belonged to the state': Health Professionals and Mothering 161 Professional interventions in infant feeding 162 Femininity and the semi-professions 172 Medicalization and infant feeding experiences 179 Current professional thinking 183 7 Control and Resistance in Infant Feeding Regimes 189 Discourses of infant feeding 190 Forms of resistance 197 Women's stories 199 Feminism, breast-feeding and resistance 211 8 Feminism and Infant Feeding: Theory and Policy 214 Summary of main arguments 214 Is choice between breast-feeding and bottle feeding enough? 221 Theoretical conclusions: the sexual difference versus gender neutrality debate 227 Policy and practice conclusions: strategies for change 234 Concluding comments 239 Bibliography 241 Name Index 260 Subject Index 264 Foreword Once upon a time all babies in Western s'ocieties were breast fed. They were not, as every reader of eighteenth- and nine teenth-century literature knows, necessarily fed hy their mothers, but the human breast was the sole source of in fant feeding. Today, what was universal has become the choice of a minority of mothers. The word 'choice' is central here: what is now taken for granted is that mothers should choose how to feed their babies rather than simply accepting what is naturally given, and possible. Thus in the context of discussions of breast-feeding the idea of 'a woman's right to choose' becomes a complex, and paradoxical, idea. In one sense, most people would probably defend the possibility of bottle-feeding; after all, hreast-feeding is not necessarily positive for the mother, nor is it always necessarily feasible. On the other hand, power ful lobhies in favour of breast-feeding argue its value for infants and point out the vast commercial interests at stake in the maintenance and continuation of bottle-feeding. Those commercial giants who sell powdered infant food in the non industrial world implicitly export, this thesis points out, dangers to children through the use of polluted water sup plies and a further dislocation of traditional feeding and eating patterns. It is in the context of these debates that Pam Carter's study is such a welcome addition to the literature, since what she does is to demonstrate that even the apparently simple and essential issue of feeding infants is part of political de hates about the status and role of women, and the general politicisation of the body. We could, therefore, 'read' the rejection of breast-feeding by many V\Testern women as com plicity with commercial interests, but in doing so we would ignore the powerful argument which suggests that in reject ing breast-feeding women may he refusing the endless re sponsibility for feeding others which culture assigns to them. Equally, we have to consider that deeply felt emotions are at stake in feeding, and that the sexualization of the breast VII VIll Foreword by adults fits uneasily, to say the least, with infant needs and demands. Of all the many instances of the body as a locus ,of politi cal struggle, the debates about the breast, and breast-feed ing, provide one of the clearest examples of the fragmentation of the body which is part of Western, twentieth-century, experience. Thus the female body as a site of adult hetero sexual pleasure is divorced from that body as a source of infant pleasure and gratification. The women interviewed by Pam Carter, and whose experiences attest to the diverse pressures about the body experienced by women, demon strated that they were often distanced from the construc tion of their bodies as anything other than a resource in heterosexual relationships. But the crucial issue is then - and here Pam Carter strikes a radical and important note - to investigate the cause of this limitation and alienation. It is not, as she rightly says, that women simply collude with male sexual fantasies about the breast which exclude real infaRts, rather than the infant in men. Rather, that women are engaged in a complex negotiation about the control and autonomy of their bodies. All too often, and sadly, the pressures on women are such that the infant is excluded from the mother's body. It is not, therefore, that only lit eral loss is involved, but equally metaphorical loss of the experience and understanding of the female body as essen tially different, autonomous and empowering. Regaining and maintaining that sense of female possibility is part of the project of feminism; within that context Pam Carter's sym pathetic and woman-friendly study illuminates the strategies for constructing and extending real choices about the most basic of human needs. University of Kent at Canterbury MARY EVANS Acknowledgemen ts There are a number of people to thank for their help in the production of this book. Mary Mellor and Jeffrey Weeks were encouraging and thoughtful in supervising the research on which it is based. Mary Evans and Michelle Stanworth gave me interesting comments which I have tried to utilise. Thanks also to .10 Campling for enabling the book to be come a reality, and to Chris Johnson for being so positive. Special thanks must go to Angela Everitt who has been unflaggingly enthusiastic even when I've been a bit daunted myself. Jake Carter played an unintentional and unconscious part in my recognition that breast-feeding was not as straight forward as it might seem. Thanks also to Jake and to William Everitt and Sarah Everitt for believing that book writing is just another household chore. I am also grateful to the women who shared their experi ences with me during the research. Interviewing them was probably the most enjoyable bit of the whole process. PAM CARTER IX

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