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If you are authenticated and think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian. Institutions can purchase access to individual titles; please contact manchesterhive manchester. Don't have an account? Chapter 2 explores how Australian experiences of pregnancy have been impacted by wider historical changes including the ways in which birth control, sex education and assisted reproductive technologies have allowed women greater control over conception; rising surveillance of and moral discourse surrounding both maternal and foetal wellbeing; and the increasing specificity and commercialisation of maternal and infant material culture.
Stories of gestation are analysed, revealing themes of conception, preparation, suffering, generation, anticipation and transition. The chapter argues that matrescence begins with gestation, that pregnancy can be understood as an apprenticeship for motherhood.
All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive. They are alternately celebrated and condemned, painted as romantic pioneers or hedonistic bed-hoppers or crude racists.
We must ask, what animated their lives? What comforted them and what unnerved them, to whom did they direct love, and to whom violence? The Souls of White Folk takes seriously — though not uncritically — what settlers said, how they viewed themselves and their world. It argues that the settler soul was composed of a series of interlaced ideas: settlers equated civilization with a hard to define whiteness; they were emotionally enriched through claims to paternalism and trusteeship over Africans; they felt themselves constantly threatened by Africans, by the state, and by the moral failures of other settlers; and they daily enacted their claims to supremacy through rituals of prestige, deference, humiliation, and violence.