Home  |   About Us  |   Contact Us  |   Sitemap
SHOPPING CART    FORUMS CHAT   
COURSES Birth Doula Childbirth Educator Postpartum Doula Breastfeeding Counselor Combined Programs Get More Clients! Advanced Training 
 
INFORMATION Frequently asked questions Reading Requirements Pregnancy Prenatal Testing Childbirth Education Labor & Birth Doula Support Pain in Labor Alternatives to Hospital Birth Parenting Fatherhood Sleep Issues Depression Breastfeeding Breastfeeding Politics Communication & Counseling Midwives Tales Grief & Loss Disability & Abnormality Evidence-Based Care Birth Politics Birth, Culture & Society Cesarean & VBAC Fertility & Infertility Anatomy & Physiology Other Languages  Printable list of all books Summary list to print Study days Doulas internationally Doulas in the USA Meet our students About your trainer Introductory Course - FREE!
 

Childbirth International
- making a difference to students in 70 countries across the world!
Click to see where they live

 

Reading Requirements - Birth Politics

Birth & Postpartum Doulas must read 3 books,
Childbirth Educators and Breastfeeding Counselors must read 5 books

You can choose any books from the full reading list - categories are on the left

Books on birth politics


Birth Crisis

Author: Sheila Kitzinger

Amazon Description: When a woman is denied all choice - feels as if she has been swallowed up by a vast machine and spat out at the other end with a baby - how can she come to terms with that ordeal? Birth Crisis draws on mothers' voices and real-life experiences to explore the suffering after childbirth which has, until now, been brushed under the carpet. It is a fascinating and useful resource for student and practicing midwives, all health professionals, and women and their families who want to learn how to overcome a traumatic birth.


Pushed: The Painful Truth About Childbirth and Modern Maternity Care

Author: Jennifer Block

Editorial Review: "Block shows how, in transforming childbirth into a business, hospitals have turned "procedures and devices developed for the treatment of abnormality" into routine practice, performed for no reason than "speeding up and ordering an unpredictable...process." Block looks into a growing contingent of parents-to-be exploring alternatives to the hospital-and the attendant likelihood of medical intervention-by seeking out birthing centers and options for home-birth. Unfortunately, obstacles to these alternatives remain considerable-laws across the U.S. criminalizing or severely restricting the practice of midwifery have led the trained care providers to practice underground in many states-while tort reform has done next to nothing to lower malpractice insurance rates or improve hospital birthing policies. This provocative, highly readable expose raises questions of great consequence for anyone planning to have a baby in U.S., as well as those interested or involved in women's health care." --Publishers Weekly


Birth: The Surprising History of How We Are Born

Author: Tina Cassidy

Editorial Review: "Anyone who has taken a prenatal education class in the last decade can detail much of what Boston Globe reporter Cassidy documents about birthing battles in her enjoyable new book. What she so cogently adds is a history of Western practices and attitudes surrounding birth, from the "God-sibs" (or "gossips") who sat by a woman's bed in Europe and early America to the scheduled cesarean of today. The book is well written and will be an important eye-opener to many. Cassidy works hard to remain neutral, but a preference for the discourse of "natural" birth creeps in." --Publishers Weekly


Born in the USA: How a Broken Maternity System Must Be Fixed to Put Women and Children First

Author: Marsden Wagner

Amazon Description: In this rare, behind-the-scenes look at what goes on in hospitals across the country, a longtime medical insider and international authority on childbirth assesses the flawed American maternity care system, powerfully demonstrating how it fails to deliver safe, effective care for both mothers and babies. Written for mothers and fathers, obstetricians, nurses, midwives, scientists, insurance professionals, and anyone contemplating having a child, this passionate expos� documents how, in the most expensive maternity care system in the world, women have lost control over childbirth and what the disturbing results of this phenomenon have been.


Vaginal Politics: A midwife story

Author: Judy Lee

Review: There is no Amazon description for this book. One customer review said "This book was hard to put down and would have been read in one sitting if I had the time This book tells of the hardships that lay-midwife Judy Lee went through and mastered. As an aspiring midwife, I hope to have the strength and courage that Judy did to stand up for midwifery, and to not simply succumb to "powerful" dictating doctors who think technical birth is better than the way nature intended. This book is a must read for any one in the medical field as well as patients. My only disappointment is that the book ended before I wanted it too."


Mind over Labor: A Breakthrough Guide to Giving Birth

Author: Carl Jones

Amazon Description: Jones stresses the importance of a mellow labor environment and subtly promotes the idea of delivery at home or in a childbearing center, but he fails to spell out the risks of a nonhospital delivery. His goal of a well-informed, positive-thinking pregnant couple is admirable, but his insistence that attitude can overcome virtually any problem is questionable.


Birth as an American Rite of Passage

Author: Robbie E. David-Floyd

Amazon Description: Davis-Floyd has written a brilliant feminist analysis of childbirth rites of passage in American culture. These rites, she argues, take away women's power over their bodies, naturally designed to bring life into the world, and for no physiological reason give it to the medical system. She believes that society, intimidated by women's ability to give birth, has designed obstetrical rituals that are far more complex than natural childbirth itself in order to deliver what is from nature into culture. "In this way," she writes, "society symbolically demonstrates ownership of its product." This beautiful book, full of insightful interviews with women on a range of birth experiences and with an extensive bibliography, is a wonderful addition to the growing literature on the anthropology of the body and the theoretical debates over mind/body and nature/culture dichotomies. Essential for all anthropology and women's studies collections and medical school libraries and highly recommended for public libraries.


The Politics of Birth

Author: Sheila Kitzinger

Amazon Description: The Politics of Birth explores ways in which we learn about birth, how we talk and feel about it, assumptions that professional caregivers may make, and the roles and skills of midwives. Topics include home birth and water birth; the use of drugs in childbirth; obstetric and nursing interventions which are often used routinely; Cesarean sections; pressures that care-givers are under, and the choices presented to women that are more apparent than real. Throughout, the author draws on research-based evidence to present both an holistic yet grounded examination of topical issues surrounding pregnancy and childbirth. This is not a "how to" book. The aim of The Politics of Birth is to help the reader develop deeper insight and understanding of how a technocratic birth culture shapes our ideas about birth and obstetric practice.

Books in Other Categories

Pregnancy
Prenatal Testing
Childbirth Education
Labor & Birth
Doula Support
Pain in Labor
Alternatives to Hospital Birth
Parenting
Fatherhood
Sleep Issues
Depression
Breastfeeding
Breastfeeding Politics
Communication & Counseling
Midwives Tales
Grief & Loss
Disability & Abnormality
Evidence-Based Care
Birth Politics
Birth, Culture & Society
Cesarean & VBAC
Fertility & Infertility
Anatomy & Physiology
Other Languages
Printable list of all books
Summary list to print

"Thank you for such a wonderful experience! I learned so much. I've enjoyed this so much that I'm thinking about becoming a Childbirth Educator and if I do, I'm definitely going through you." - Jami, Washington

 
 
     
 
Contact Us
 

Write to us here

 

 

 

or telephone on

 
USA (West) (415) 742 8458
USA (East) (646) 845 9675
UK (020) 8144 0961
Australia (02) 8011 4177
Japan (50) 5539 8960
Sth Africa (21) 813 6172
Sweden (08) 559 22 314
Hong Kong 8175 4374
   
All numbers are English speaking
 
Outside the USA

  In the UK? Click here

  In Australia? Click here

 
Student Log In
 
Username
Password
 
  Forgot password?
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
© 2008 Childbirth International. All rights reserved. Reg No 53053667J.  Privacy Policy   |   Refund Policy