Edwell, Jennifer (Author)
Jack, Jordynn Marguerite (Advisor)
Danielewicz, Jane (Advisor)
This dissertation explores the intersections of medicine and religion through a rhetorical historiography of nineteenth century birth medicine in the United States. It asks: How did religious sensibilities motivate and shape rhetoric in response to human suffering in the field of midwifery/obstetrics? What religious images, metaphors, or tropes have shaped or percolated into medical rhetoric about birth? In terms of rhetorical change, what can be discovered by mapping the development of childbirth medicine alongside shifting religious views? Origin Stories addresses these questions by considering the particular ways Protestant rhetoric and values permeated the establishment of mainstream or “orthodox” birth medicine. The first chapter situates this project within the subfield of rhetoric of health and medicine. Chapter Two argues that early nineteenth century American medical writers employed hermeneutical practices drawn from Christian natural theology to reconcile their religious and medical beliefs as well as to establish the legitimacy of birth medicine. Chapter Three shows that Protestant terministic screens shaped how mid-century medical practitioners interpreted the cause(s) of maternal suffering and the types of interventions they believed were appropriate during childbirth. Chapter Four formulates the concept of “theo-moral physiology” as a unique late-nineteenth century medical orientation that enabled physicians to define the problem of infant mortality as a social pathology and to invent the figure of the premature infant. The fifth chapter discusses the implications of this project for scholars in rhetoric and the medical/health humanities. By bringing attention to the religious dimensions of medical rhetoric, Origin Stories reveals that the history of childbirth contains significant, but often overlooked, cooperation and integration between religion and medicine.
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Book
Jennifer F. Kosmin;
(2020)
Authority, Gender, and Midwifery in Early Modern Italy: Contested Deliveries
(/p/isis/citation/CBB190761294/)
Book
Nadia Maria Filippini;
(2017)
Generare, partorire, nascere: Una storia dall’antichità alla provetta
(/p/isis/citation/CBB487767058/)
Thesis
Nichols, Marcia D.;
(2010)
The Man-Midwife's Tale: Re-Reading Male-Authored Midwifery Guides in Britain and America, 1750--1820
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001567182/)
Book
Felicity M. Turner;
(2022)
Proving Pregnancy: Gender, Law, and Medical Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century America
(/p/isis/citation/CBB122148305/)
Book
Kline, Wendy A.;
(2019)
Coming Home: How Midwives Changed Birth
(/p/isis/citation/CBB696013674/)
Article
Wangui Muigai;
(2019)
"Something Wasn't Clean": Black Midwifery, Birth, and Postwar Medical Education in All My Babies
(/p/isis/citation/CBB729992204/)
Thesis
Eileen J. B. Thrower;
(2016)
Blazing Trails for Midwifery Care: Oral Histories of Georgia's Pioneer Nurse-Midwives
(/p/isis/citation/CBB168809967/)
Book
Colleen Derkatch;
(2022)
Why Wellness Sells: Natural Health in a Pharmaceutical Culture
(/p/isis/citation/CBB798800376/)
Thesis
Andrea Nero;
(2022)
Beggars and Kings: Marginalized People in the Discourses of Early American Scientific Societies
(/p/isis/citation/CBB847893337/)
Book
Rossana Basso;
(2015)
Levatrici: L’assistenza ostetrica nell’Italia liberale
(/p/isis/citation/CBB333868644/)
Chapter
Raquel A. G. Reyes;
Laurence Monnais;
Harold J. Cook;
(2013)
Science, Sex and Superstition: Midwifery in 19th Century Philippines
(/p/isis/citation/CBB053432853/)
Article
Morag Martin;
(2021)
Attending the birth: competition for obstetrical training by medical students and midwives in nineteenth-century France
(/p/isis/citation/CBB689753274/)
Article
Lissell Quiroz;
(2021)
Une analyse féministe décoloniale de l’histoire de l’obstétrique (Pérou, XIXe siècle)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB145927876/)
Article
Alicia D. Bonaparte;
(2014)
“The Satisfactory Midwife Bag”: Midwifery Regulation in South Carolina, Past and Present Considerations
(/p/isis/citation/CBB066016370/)
Thesis
Jeffrey Thomas Wright;
(2016)
Darwin, Huxley, and the Nineteenth-Century Rhetoric of Science
(/p/isis/citation/CBB948034428/)
Article
Morag Martin;
(2021)
Disciplining the Bodies of Single Women: The Failure of Midwifery Education in the Gers, 1802–1839
(/p/isis/citation/CBB862046155/)
Thesis
Alejandro Quintero Mächler;
(2020)
Bleeding Nations: Blood Discourses and the Interpretation of Violence in Mid-Nineteenth Century Spanish America (1838-1870)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB675465421/)
Article
Jessica Martucci;
(2023)
“It Gives the Mother the Best Chance for Her Life”: U.S. Catholic Health Care and the Treatment of Ectopic Pregnancy
(/p/isis/citation/CBB426370746/)
Book
Gabrielle Robilliard;
(2017)
Tending Mothers and the Fruits of the Womb
(/p/isis/citation/CBB104568911/)
Book
Rebecca Whiteley;
(2022)
Birth Figures: Early Modern Prints and the Pregnant Body
(/p/isis/citation/CBB774234095/)
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