Cultural and Biological Perspectives on Pregnancy and Childbirth

CRN

13887

Course Number

338P

Credits

5

Course Description

This course seeks to understand cultural and biological aspects of pregnancy and childbirth. We will study reproductive biology, the biological and psychological changes people experience during pregnancy and childbirth, the development of the fetus, and the evolution of pregnancy and childbirth. We will pay special attention to the ways American medicine has viewed and treated childbirth, and will explore the recent changes in American childbirth practices including a comparison of the midwifery model of care and the medical model. Other topics will include assisted reproductive technologies and a cross-cultural perspective on pregnancy and birth. Students will participate in a quarter-long "pregnancy game" in which they will manage a fictional pregnancy. Students will research and make and explain decisions based on complications or situations that arise in their pregnancies.

Prerequisites

FAIR 206A, or equivalent.

Materials Fee

7.43

Required Texts

Sandra Steingraber: Having Faith: An Ecologist’s Journey to Motherhood

Tina Cassidy: Birth: The Surprising History of How We Are Born

Julia Chinyere Oparah & Alicia D. Bonaparte: Birthing Justice

Dorothy Roberts: Killing the Black Body

 

Additional reading will be assigned from various sources.

Credit/Evaluation

S/NX grading. Narrative evaluations will focus on regular attendance in class, informed participation in class discussions, weekly "pregnancy game" report and/or written reflections to class readings, and 2 drafts of a 2500-page research paper.

Term

Winter 2024

Course Instructor(s)

Hilary Schwandt

Course Subject

FAIR