Abstract
Like in most places around the world, childbirth assistance in Brazil was traditionally performed by women. In 1832, however, a law was passed requiring a license for the exercise of medicine, pharmacy, and midwifery. That event marked the differentiation between the traditional and the modern kind of childbirth assistants, leading to an increasing process of medicalization of birth. Hence, the historiography on the subject has pointed out the appropriation by men of a traditional women’s world. This article seeks to understand the gender dynamics in the birthing room by focusing on the new kind of professional that emerged in Brazil in the early nineteenth century: the “graduated midwife.” To what extent was there cooperation or competition between physicians and graduated midwives? How different were their obstetrical practices? After examining the Annaes Brasiliensis de Medicina—the official publication of the Imperial Academy of Medicine—I argue that the graduated midwife was the historical intermediate in transitioning from traditional midwifery to scientific obstetrics. Finally, I conclude that, as a woman of science, the graduated midwife filled the gap that isolated the female sphere of care from the male sphere of science, paving the road for the entrance of women in medicine in 1879.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Reference47 articles.
1. Brazil: The Forging of a Nation, 1798–1852;Barman,1988
2. A obstetrícia: Do saber popular à medicalização;Progianti;Rev. Enferm. UERJ,2001
3. Fontes para a história da ginecologia e obstetrícia no Brasil
4. Brought to Bed: Childbearing in America, 1750 to 1950;Leavitt,1986
5. Formação de Parteiras na Faculdade de Medicina do Rio de Janeiro Entre os anos de 1832 e 1839;Medeiros,2014