La Leche League : at the crossroads of medicine, feminism, and religion

著者

    • Ward, Jule DeJager

書誌事項

La Leche League : at the crossroads of medicine, feminism, and religion

Jule DeJager Ward

University of North Carolina Press, 2000

  • : cloth : alk. paper
  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: cloth : alk. paper ISBN 9780807825099

内容説明

In 1956, when La Leche League was founded, if a new mother chose to breastfeed rather than bottlefeed her child, she could by no means expect universal support for her decision. Though physicians of the era admitted that breastfeeding was the best method of infant feeding, they warned of the difficulties that nursing mothers faced, and many held that successful breastfeeding required a knowledge of science and medicine that most new mothers could not claim. Started by seven Catholic women who simply wished to help their friends learn to breastfeed, La Leche League grew into an organization with several million members worldwide, known here and abroad for its pathbreaking promotion of the breastfeeding of infants. Offering a fascinating look inside an organization whose full history has been essentially untold, Jule Ward explores the genesis, theological underpinnings, and development of La Leche League. She demonstrates that, despite distancing itself from any overt expression of its religious roots, the organization remains a quasi-religious articulation of Catholic social thought blended with scientific ideology and feminism. In short, says Ward, the story of La Leche League provides an excellent example of how religion in practice permeates everyday life. |A theologian examines the development of La Leche League, showing how it has incorporated Catholic social thought, scientific ideology, and feminism in support of breastfeeding infants worldwide.
巻冊次

: pbk. : alk. paper ISBN 9780807847916

内容説明

In 1956, when La Leche League was founded, if a new mother chose to breastfeed rather than bottlefeed her child, she could by no means expect universal support for her decision. Though physicians of the era admitted that breastfeeding was the best method of infant feeding, they warned of the difficulties that nursing mothers faced, and many held that successful breastfeeding required a knowledge of science and medicine that most new mothers could not claim. Started by seven Catholic women who simply wished to help their friends learn to breastfeed, La Leche League grew into an organization with several million members worldwide, known here and abroad for its pathbreaking promotion of the breastfeeding of infants. Offering a fascinating look inside an organization whose full history has been essentially untold, Jule Ward explores the genesis, theological underpinnings, and development of La Leche League. She demonstrates that, despite distancing itself from any overt expression of its religious roots, the organization remains a quasi-religious articulation of Catholic social thought blended with scientific ideology and feminism. In short, says Ward, the story of La Leche League provides an excellent example of how religion in practice permeates everyday life. |A theologian examines the development of La Leche League, showing how it has incorporated Catholic social thought, scientific ideology, and feminism in support of breastfeeding infants worldwide.

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