Whereas in western countries breastfeeding is an uncontroversial, purely personal issue, in most parts of the world mother and baby form part of a network of interpersonal relations with its own rules and expectations. In this study, the author examines the cultural and social context of breastfeeding among the Gogo women of the Cigongwe's village in Tanzania, as part of the Paediatric Programme of Doctors with Africa, based in Padua. The focus is on mothers' behaviour and post partum taboos as key elements in Gogo understanding of the vicissitudes of the breast feeding process. This…mehr
Whereas in western countries breastfeeding is an uncontroversial, purely personal issue, in most parts of the world mother and baby form part of a network of interpersonal relations with its own rules and expectations. In this study, the author examines the cultural and social context of breastfeeding among the Gogo women of the Cigongwe's village in Tanzania, as part of the Paediatric Programme of Doctors with Africa, based in Padua. The focus is on mothers' behaviour and post partum taboos as key elements in Gogo understanding of the vicissitudes of the breast feeding process. This nutritional period is subject to many different events both physical and social that may upset the natural and intense link between mother and child. Any violation of cultural norms, particularly those dealing with sexual behaviour, marriage and reproduction, can, in the eyes of the Gogo, put at risk the correct development of an infant with serious consequences both for the baby's health as well as for the woman's image as mother and wife.
Mara Mabilia teaches at the Intercultural Studies Master's Programme as well as Cultural Anthropology with a sub-field in Cooperation and Development at the Faculty of Education, both at University of Padua. She also lectures in other Postgraduate programmes (University of Brescia and University of Rome). She prepares doctors who serve as volunteers in Africa at C.U.A.M.M. Doctors with Africa - International College for Health Cooperation in Developing Countries, Padua.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Illustrations Introduction Chapter 1. Cigongwe * Towards the village * Meeting with the village * Fieldwork * The route of the research Chapter 2. The Gogo Women * The living space * The house * Nyumba: physical-residential unit, social-residential unit * The Gogo woman Chapter 3. Breast Feeding * Breast feeding between nature and culture * The modalities of breast feeding * Breast milk * 'Bad milk' in only one breast Chapter 4. The 'Good Mother', the 'Bad Mother': Diarrhoea as a Sign of Social Disorder * Inside the problem * Motherhood and mothering * The health of the newborn: a challenge to survival * Post-partum taboos Chapter 5. Maternal Milk: Indicator of 'Good Mother' * Breast feeding: a bridge between the different levels of the Gogo social system * The woman: mother and nurturer * A brief return to the village Bibliography Index
Acknowledgements Illustrations Introduction Chapter 1. Cigongwe * Towards the village * Meeting with the village * Fieldwork * The route of the research Chapter 2. The Gogo Women * The living space * The house * Nyumba: physical-residential unit, social-residential unit * The Gogo woman Chapter 3. Breast Feeding * Breast feeding between nature and culture * The modalities of breast feeding * Breast milk * 'Bad milk' in only one breast Chapter 4. The 'Good Mother', the 'Bad Mother': Diarrhoea as a Sign of Social Disorder * Inside the problem * Motherhood and mothering * The health of the newborn: a challenge to survival * Post-partum taboos Chapter 5. Maternal Milk: Indicator of 'Good Mother' * Breast feeding: a bridge between the different levels of the Gogo social system * The woman: mother and nurturer * A brief return to the village Bibliography Index
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Shop der buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg Amtsgericht Augsburg HRA 13309