- Title
- Feeling like a genius: enhancing women's changing embodied self during first childbearing
- Creator
- Parratt, Jennifer
- Relation
- University of Newcastle Research Higher Degree Thesis
- Resource Type
- thesis
- Date
- 2010
- Description
- Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
- Description
- Background: The traditional way of considering childbearing change has been to conceptualise the role of the woman as ‘becoming a mother’ and the role of the midwife in that view is to help the woman become a mother. Contemporary midwifery efforts aimed at empowering women toward positive birth experiences are based on incorrect or incomplete assumptions that limit the theory and practice of midwifery. Question and aim: ‘How does a woman’s embodied sense of self change during the childbearing period and what factors in the childbirth experience seem to be positively related to her improved sense of self’. The aim is to create theory about how to enhance women’s embodied self during childbearing. Methodology: The research is explicitly feminist and post-structural. The fourteen primigravid participants planned normal birth in diverse settings. Personal narratives, survey research and grounded theorising guided data collection, analysis and theorising. Data was gathered via questionnaires and in-depth interviews at three time points, one antenatal and two postnatal. Key findings: During childbearing, a woman’s sense of self is improved when she has an enhanced capacity to feel herself as an embodied whole and intrinsically powerful person. The concept ‘genius change’ represents a woman’s active and effortful use of intrinsic power. It also refers to a woman’s developing trust in her intrinsic power. Midwifery factors that are unsupportive of a woman’s improved sense of self are termed ‘habitual practices’. These habitually undertaken practices undermine a woman’s sense of her own power and encourage reliance on her usual responses to change. ‘Empowering practices’ are positively related to a woman’s improved sense of self. These practices guide a woman to connect with and actualise her intrinsic power in new and previously unanticipated ways. Significance: This research is significant for childbearing women because an enhanced sense of embodied self during first childbearing provides a strengthened foundation from which a woman can approach future changes in childbearing and throughout life. The resultant theory is significant for midwifery practice and education because it makes explicit how a midwife can optimise a woman’s psychophysiological wellbeing in ways that uniquely suit the diverse requirements of each woman.
- Subject
- childbirth; midwifery; embodiment; transition; sense of self; feminist; post-structural; theory; maternity care
- Identifier
- uon:6515
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/803830
- Rights
- Copyright 2010 Jennifer Parratt
- Language
- eng
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Thumbnail | File | Description | Size | Format | |||
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View Details Download | SOURCE1 | Abstract | 271 KB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download | ||
View Details Download | SOURCE2 | Thesis | 3 MB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download |