She said, she said: Interruptive narratives of pregnancy and childbirth
Abstract
In this article, we explore narrative inquiry data we collected with women who attempted to have a natural, drug-free childbirth for the birth of their first child. The data presented come from semi-structured life story interviews with six women who live in a metropolitan city in the mid-southern United States. Using creative analytic practice (CAP), the women’s experiences are presented as a composite poem. The (re)presentation of the women’s narratives in the poem emphasizes the tensions between what women desired and planned for in contrast to what they actually experienced during pregnancy and birth. The poem illustrates the politics of agency, the ways in which consent is bypassed or assumed in some medical institutions in the United States, and the resilience of the women.
Publication Title
Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung
Recommended Citation
Happel-Parkins, A., & Azim, K. (2017). She said, she said: Interruptive narratives of pregnancy and childbirth. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung, 18 (2) Retrieved from https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/facpubs/10387