Litcius/Paper detail

Not just mechanical birthing bodies: articulating the impact of imbalanced power relationships in the birth arena on women’s subjectivity, agency, and consciousness

Orli Dahan, Sara Cohen Shabot

2022Mind Culture and Activity14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The experiences of birthing women are essential to optimal birth outcomes. Here we examine how obstetric practices and behaviors in the birth arena result in subjugation of birthing women and their treatment as birthing (mechanical) bodies. We demonstrate that cultural practices that relegate women's consciousness and agency increase the likelihood of harmful effects caused unintentionally by medical activity. We suggest a corrective. The concept ‘birthing consciousness’ can bridge the relevant scientific fields because it describes a naturally occurring state of consciousness triggered by biochemical processes during birth that also represents the subjectivity and agency of birthing women and their importance.

Topics & Concepts

SubjectivityAgency (philosophy)ConsciousnessPower (physics)Gender studiesPersonhoodSociologyBridge (graph theory)PsychologyMedicinePolitical scienceEpistemologySocial scienceLawPhilosophyNeuroscienceQuantum mechanicsInternal medicinePhysicsMaternal and Perinatal Health InterventionsReproductive Health and ContraceptionReproductive Health and Technologies