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Shut it Down: Nineteenth-Century Southern Fictions of Reproduction


Metadata FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.advisorRyan, Jamesen_US
dc.contributor.authorSims, Jessicaen_US
dc.date.accessioned2015-05-04T21:27:21Z
dc.date.available2015-05-04T21:27:21Z
dc.date.issued2015-05-04
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10415/4542
dc.description.abstractThe dissertation analyzes how the establishment of professionalized—and masculinized—medicine during the nineteenth century controlled female sexuality by policing reproductive rights and rates. Focusing specifically on literature written about the south, I propose that nineteenth-century physicians regulated gender normativity by racializing procreation as a white privilege. Reinvented tools, such as the speculum, and progressive operations, such as the three-stitch suture and ovariotomy, defined a scientific field devoted to eliminating uterine diseases that hindered pregnancy. Gynecologists who restored white anatomy to normalcy mastered the entire racial dichotomy of reproductive stereotypes that informed public perceptions of sexuality across the color line. As the nineteenth century progressed, antebellum operative procedures intended to maximize women’s childbearing periods were adapted to curtail postbellum birthing rates after emancipation. Physicians circumvented female reproductive control by conflating gynecology with the propagandist philosophies of race suicide scientists and eugenicists. Women’s health care became a smokescreen for gynecologists who engineered white genetic superiority under the guise of curing patients suffering from reproductive illnesses. The female body, therefore, became an evolving site of public debate as to the private medical procedures necessary to “breed” racialized perceptions of reproduction.en_US
dc.rightsEMBARGO_NOT_AUBURNen_US
dc.subjectEnglishen_US
dc.titleShut it Down: Nineteenth-Century Southern Fictions of Reproductionen_US
dc.typeDissertationen_US
dc.embargo.lengthMONTHS_WITHHELD:12en_US
dc.embargo.statusEMBARGOEDen_US
dc.embargo.enddate2016-05-01en_US
dc.contributor.committeeWyss, Hilaryen_US
dc.contributor.committeeNunn, Erichen_US

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