Will You Be Mother?: Women Who Choose to Say No

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NYU Press, 1995 - 243 pagine

Women are taught from the earliest moments of life that motherhood, along with marriage to a man, is a natural state to which they should aspire. From dollplay as a child to nagging questions of when am I going to become a grandparent as one gets older, the societal pressure to procreate is constant and intense. What then, of women who choose not to have children or are unable to have children? How do they respond to a society and to families that view them as selfish, incomplete, and less then women?
In Will You Be Mother? Jane Bartlett interviews fifty women who, for various reasons, have not had children. We hear from women who have chosen to be sterilized in their twenties, others who can never say never but postpone childbearing because of acute ambivalence, women in their sixties who have chosen to never have children and are happy with that choice, and infertile women who have had no choice. They speak of how their own childhoods shaped their decision and, while expressing their frustration at the pressures placed upon them, also exhibit an unequivocal sense of freedom. Will You Be Mother? is a diverse exploration of the personal and public implications of the pressure society puts on women to have children, and a challenging critique of the prevalent belief that motherhood is a natural state for women.

 

Sommario

Pregnancy and the Maternal Instinct
37
The Mother Experience
62
Making the Decision
97
Contraception Choices
130
ChildFree Women and their
161
Work and the Leisure Lifestyle
186
Infertility
211
Thoughts for the Future
229
Copyright

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Informazioni sull'autore (1995)

Jane Bartlett, a freelance journalist, lives in London.

Informazioni bibliografiche