Muslim Midwives
This book reconstructs the role of midwives in medieval to early modern Islamic history through a careful reading of a wide range of classical and medieval Arabic sources. The author casts the midwife's social status in premodern Islam as a privileged position from which she could mediate between male authority in patriarchal society and female reproductive power within the family. This study also takes a broader historical view of midwifery in the Middle East by examining the tensions between learned medicine (male) and popular, medico-religious practices (female) from early Islam into the Ottoman period and addressing the confrontation between traditional midwifery and Western obstetrics in the first half of the nineteenth century.
- The first book entirely devoted to the social history of midwifery in the Islamic Middle East
- Contributes to a better understanding of the ambivalence and contradictions in gender relations in these societies
- Clarifies the distinction between professional and popular midwifery in the Middle East
Reviews & endorsements
'Giladi's source base is broad and diverse; his reading has clearly been vast, and he does a very good job of making his enormous body of quotations, facts, and narratives manageable for the reader. The extremely broad scope of the project (both chronological and geographical) is justified by the sparse and difficult nature of his data, which sometimes requires him to discern patterns and commonalities (or, less often, contrasts and changes) by bringing together scattered examples gleaned from different times and places.' Marion H. Katz, Journal of the American Oriental Society
Product details
February 2018Paperback
9781107646810
208 pages
227 × 154 × 15 mm
0.326kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Islamic views on birth and motherhood
- 2. Midwifery as a craft
- 3. The subordinate midwife: male physicians versus female midwives
- 4. The absent midwife
- 5. The privileged midwife
- 6. Ritual, magic, and the midwife's roles in and outside the birthing place
- 7. From traditional to modern midwifery in the Middle East
- Concluding remarks.