The Socio-Cultural Effects of Banning Traditional Midwives from Attending Homebirth in Romania
Keywords:
midwife, childbirth beliefs, confined women, RomaniaAbstract
Starting from 1960 traditional birth attendants were forbidden to deliver in Romania and pregnant women found themselves forced to give birth in hospitals. The highly respected village figure became a cultural phenomenon that made her more of a legend character. A village from Galaţi County experienced an uncanny event that activated the cultural information on midwives, as a continuation of the stories of her qualities. In hospitals, however, rituals are maintained under the intention of purifying nurses from unclean birth, while granny-midwife became a role, a character usually played by the mother of the woman in parturition. Customs evolve against the loss of this important social persona and we face an artificial scenario. We are now able to witness the last social effects of banning homebirth.
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Copyright (c) 2011 Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
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