The Politics of Birth in Composite States: Midwives in Transylvania (19th – 20th Century)
The Politics of Birth in Composite States: Midwives in Transylvania (19th – 20th Century)
Author(s): Luminiţa Dumănescu, Marius EppelSubject(s): Social history, Gender history
Published by: Centrul de Studiere a Populaţiei
Keywords: midwifery; birth medicalization; Austrian-Hungarian legislation; generale normativum; midwives schools;
Summary/Abstract: The second half of the 19th Century witnessed an increased process of birth medicalization - in Europe and in Transylvania as well. We approached the “medicalization” process in both its meanings: the professionalization of the healers, but also the spreading of medical care to people. As consequence, the paper will address both midwives’ training in a society living at the periphery of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the opening to modern care of one of the most intimate moments of a woman’s private life, that of child delivery. The paper aims to follow the legislation concerning the medicalizasion of birth in Transylvania, process which allowed the opening of the local schools for training midwives.
Journal: Romanian Journal of Population Studies
- Issue Year: 13/2019
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 7-28
- Page Count: 22
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF