Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 3-8, March 2008

A feminist history of Australian midwifery from colonisation until the 1980s

Graduate School for Health Practice, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia

Received 18 October 2007; received in revised form 30 November 2007; accepted 3 December 2007.

Summary 

This paper uses a feminist interpretation and secondary sources to describe the history of Australian midwifery from colonisation until the 1980s. There have been too few midwife scholars who have had access to or used primary data collections to describe the role and place of midwives in the colonising community. I draw on a range of biography, medical literature and work by sociologists and economic historians to produce a limited picture of the history of professional midwifery. This helps to explain the position of midwives today and the problematic relationship we often have with medicine.

Keywords: Midwifery, History, Australia, Feminist, Professions

 

PII: S1871-5192(07)00120-5

doi:10.1016/j.wombi.2007.12.001

Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 3-8, March 2008