Lexington Books
Pages: 250
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-7936-0826-0 • Hardback • January 2024 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-7936-0827-7 • eBook • January 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Sandra Trudgen Dawson is Executive Administrator of the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians.
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
List of Figures
Introduction: Mothers and Midwives: Reproductive Labour in Interwar and Wartime Britain
Chapter One: Infant Mortality, Surplus Women, and the Establishment of a Profession
Chapter Two: Midwives and Maternal Mortality During and After the Great War
Chapter Three: Women’s Reproductive Health and Birth Control in the 1920s and 1930s
Chapter Four: Labour Pains and Activism for Mothers in the 1930s
Chapter Five: Municipal Midwives and National Shortages
Chapter Six: War and Reproductive Labour
Chapter Seven: Desiring More: Mothers, Midwives, and the Policies of Wartime Persuasion
Epilogue
Bibliography
About the Author
"A meticulously researched account of reproductive labor in Britain, this study clearly explains how and why midwifery changed from the late nineteenth century through the Second World War. Dawson offers a sweeping analysis of the cultural and political forces that undermined attempts to promote motherhood and midwifery and shares the voices of those who refused to follow official directives."
— Allison Scardino Belzer, Georgia Southern University
"Bringing a skilled midwife’s knowledge to the history of motherhood and reproductive labor, Sandra Dawson shows how there was no good war for parturient mothers and their infants. Nonetheless, British women sought to determine where they gave birth and midwives carried out their duties despite lack of resources or prestige. Revisionist history at its best!"
— Eileen Boris, University of California-Santa Barbara
"In Mothers, Midwives, and Reproductive Labor in Interwar and Wartime Britain, Sandra Dawson prioritizes the voices of women. This makes her book a welcome addition to the literature on women and war and to histories of medicine, childbearing, and the origins and unfolding of the early welfare state in Britain."
— Susan R. Grayzel, Utah State University