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£14.95
£14.95
ISBN: 978-0-415-21160-4
Page count: 177
Publisher: Routledge
Publication year: 2007
Sanctioning Pregnancy offers a unique critique of sociocultural constructions of pregnancy and the ways in which it is represented in contemporary culture, and examines the common myths which exist about diet, exercise and work in pregnancy, alongside notions of risk and media portrayals of pregnant women.
Pregnancy provides a very public, visual confirmation of femininity. It is a time of rapid physical and psychological adjustment for women and is surrounded by stereotyping, taboos and social expectations. This book seeks to examine these popular attitudes towards pregnancy and to consider how they influence women’s experiences of being pregnant.
Table of contents:
- Introduction: Pregnancy in Context
- Paradoxes of Pregnancy
- Cognition in pregnancy
- Being Pregnant at work: pregnancy and employment
- Eating for one or eating for two: diet and eating behaviour in pregnancy
- Keeping active: daily activity and exercise in pregnancy
- Pregnancy under surveillance
- Epilogue: is pregnancy special?


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