1st Edition

Philosophical Inquiries into Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Mothering Maternal Subjects

Edited By Sheila Lintott, Maureen Sander-Staudt Copyright 2012
    268 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    300 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Philosophical inquiry into pregnancy, childbirth, and mothering is a growing area of interest to academic philosophers. This volume brings together a diverse group of philosophers to speak about topics in this reemerging area of philosophical inquiry, taking up new themes, such as maternal aesthetics, and pursuing old ones in new ways, such as investigating stepmothering as it might inform and ground an ethics of care. The theoretical foci of the book include feminist, existential, ethical, aesthetic, phenomenological, social and political theories. These perspectives are then employed to consider many dimensions of pregnancy, childbirth, and mothering, which are of central importance to human existence, but are only rarely discussed in philosophical cannons. Topics include pregnancy and embodiment, breast-feeding, representations – or the lack thereof – of pregnant and birthing women, adoption, and post-partum motherhood.

    Introduction Sheila Lintott and Maureen Sander-Staudt  I. Maternal Norms, Practices, and Insights 1. Sara Ruddick, Transracial Adoption, and the Goals of Maternal Practice Jean Keller  2. Where Did I Go? The Invisible Postpartum Mother Jennifer Benson and Allison Wolf   3. Into the Mouths of Babes: The Moral Responsibility to Breastfeed Christine Overall and Tabitha Bernard  4. Tales from the Tit: The Moral and Political Implications of Useless Lactational Suffering Lissa Skitolsky  5. Motherhood and the Workings of Disgust Sherri Irvin  II. Maternal Roles and Relations  6. The Practical and Theoretical Challenges of Mothering with Disabilities: A Feminist Standpoint Analysis Maeve M. O'Donovan  7. Mothers, Children with Disability, and Post-Modern Sainthood Christine A. James  8. Psychoanalytic Feminism and the Dynamics of Mothering a Daughter Alison Stone  9. Why Don't Philosophers Tell Their Mothers’ Stories? Philosophy, Motherhood, and Imaginative Resistance Joshua Shaw  10. On Stepmothers as Hybrid Beings & World-Travelers: Towards a New Model for Care-ful Ethics Beckey Sukovaty  III. Maternal Phenomena, Phenomenology, and Aesthetics 11. Creating Life, Giving Birth, and Learning to Die Brooke Schueneman  12.  The Pregnant Body as a Public Body: An Occasion for Community Care, Instrumental Coercion, and a Singular Collectivity Julie Piering  13. Becoming Bovine: A Phenomenology of Early Motherhood, and its Practical, Political Consequences Sally Fischer  14. The Aesthetics of Childbirth Peg Brand and Paula Granger  15. The Sublimity of Gestating and Giving Birth: Toward a Feminist Conception of the Sublime Sheila Lintott

    Biography

    Sheila Lintott is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bucknell University with research interests in feminist philosophy, philosophical aesthetics, and environmental philosophy. Her work appears in journals such as Hypatia, Environmental Ethics, and The British Journal of Aesthetics. She also edited Motherhood: Philosophy for Everyone—The Birth of Wisdom (Blackwell).

    Maureen Sander-Staudt is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Arizona State University with academic expertise in feminist philosophy and literature. She has published in Hypatia, The Journal of Social Philosophy, and is the co-editor of Applying Care Ethics to Business, with Maurice Hamington (Springer Press).

    "Philosophical Inquiries into Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Mothering provides one such gendered context from which we, as philosophers, may learn about becoming a mother by eavesdropping on mothers' stories. ... [A]s a collection it provides us with dialogical conversations among feminist philosophers on and as maternal subjects that provoke new insights into both motherhood and philosophy itself." Shelley M. Park, University of Central Florida, USA