COLONIAL MODERNITIES: MIDWIFERY IN BENGAL, C. 1860-1947
COLONIAL MODERNITIES: MIDWIFERY IN BENGAL, C. 1860-1947
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This book, part of the series The Social History of Health and Medicine in South Asia, looks at the interactions between childbirth and midwifery practices and colonial modernities. Taking eastern India as a case study and related research from other areas, with hard empirical data from local government bodies, municipal corporations and district boards, it goes beyond the conventional narrative to show how the late nineteenth-century initiatives to reform birthing practices were essentially a modernist response of the western-educated colonised middle class to the colonial critique of Indian sociocultural codes. It provides a perceptive historical analysis of how institutionalization of midwifery was shaped by the debates on the women’s question, nationalism and colonial public health policies, all intersecting in the interwar years.
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