Breastwork: Rethinking BreastfeedingUNSW Press, 2005 - 207 pagine Breastwork delivers an original and personal approach to a near-universal practice and doesn't shy from controversy or controversial topics, such as sexual desire and breastfeeding. It features a broad range of illustrations from Renaissance paintings of mother and child (Madonna del Latte) to Jerry Hall breastfeeding on the cover of Vanity Fair and Kate Langbroek breastfeeding on The Panel to a banned New Zealand health poster of a man breastfeeding at work. |
Sommario
Performing breastfeeding rethinking nature | 12 |
Medicalising breastfeeding headwork versus breastwork | 41 |
Publicising breastfeeding scandal in the city | 66 |
Sexualising breastfeeding science to kink | 84 |
Pictorialising breastfeeding models of maternity | 110 |
Racialising breastfeeding black breasts white milk | 136 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Aboriginal women activity Annie Leibovitz argues Australia baby birth bodily brain breastfeed breastfeeding in public breastfeeding practices breastmilk breasts Breasts and Breastfeeding CAAC Cannold Carter chapter child choice Cindy Sherman Congress Alukura contemporary corporeal cultural debate dominant Elizabeth Grosz embodied emotions erotic example experiences of breastfeeding female Feminism Feminist function gender Grosz Herald Sun heterosexuality hormones hospital hypothalamus ideas imagined Indigenous women Jerry Hall Jo Spence Joey Karen Carter Kirstie Marshall knowledge lactation consultant language Leibovitz's lives Madonna male maternal sexuality meanings of breastfeeding milk moral mother motherhood narratives nation natural nipple Nursing OATSIHS oxytocin parliament particular performance photograph pleasure political postmodern potential pregnant production prolactin race Rachel relation representation reproduction scandals script social stories suckling suggests television texts thinking tion tradition Traina understanding values Virgin visual Western woman women breastfeeding women's bodies writing