Situating Women's Reproductive Activities
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Anthropologist
- Vol. 102 (4) , 773-788
- https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.2000.102.4.773
Abstract
In her pathbreaking book, Abortion and Woman's Choice, Rosalind Pollack Petchesky astutely observed that, in many societies, control over the methods and goals of reproduction is a critical site of contest, particularly between women and men. Yet the circumstances under which reproductive relations will be characterized by conflict, consensus, or some of both have seldom been systematically explored. In this paper, I therefore offer three examples of different structural contexts in which either women or men had the preponderance of power to influence key aspects of women's reproductive activities. I argue that while structural factors, notably the distribution of economic, political, and institutional resources, are fundamental, they do not only act directly but are experienced, interpreted, and made meaningful through specific cultural processes, particularly gender ideologies, norms about morality, and beliefs about how women should behave. It is together that these structural factors and cultural processes shape the climates and contexts within which women's reproductive activities are situated and take place, [reproduction, gender politics, Latin America, Mexican Americans]Keywords
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