Someday, now: preconceiving risk and maternal responsibility -- From the womb to the woman: the shifting locus of reproductive risk -- Anticipating risky bodies: making sense of future reproductive risk -- Whither women's health? reproductive politics and the legacy of maternalism -- Get a reproductive life plan! producing the zero trimester -- Promoting maternal visions: gender, race, and future baby love -- Governing risk, governing women: anticipatory motherhood and social order
Summary
"A healthy pregnancy is now defined well before pregnancy even begins. Public health messages promote pre-pregnancy health and health care by encouraging reproductive-age women to think of themselves as mothers before they think of themselves as women. This happens despite little evidence that such an approach improves maternal and child health. This book examines the dramatic shift in ideas about reproductive risk and birth outcomes over the last several decades, unearthing how these ideas intersect with the politics of women's health and motherhood at the beginning of the twenty-first century."--Provided by publisher
Analysis
21st century reproduction
american womens health
better birth
better prenatal
disciplining womens bodies
gender studies
healthy pregnancy
healthy reproduction
maternity
medical care prior to pregnancy
politics of reproductions
politics of womens health
public health
reproduction in the us
reproductive freedom
reproductive health
reproductive politics
womens bodies
womens health and hygiene
womens health
womens issues
womens studies
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher