Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940

The production and diffusion of knowledge are heavily classed and gendered practices. This thesis examines some of the processes and power relations at the heart of the creation and diffusion of knowledge on sexuality and female physiology in the period 1900-1940. More specifically, it explores the...

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Main Author: Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie
Other Authors: Dossett, Kate M. ; Meyer, Jessica K.
Published: University of Leeds 2018
Subjects:
900
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.755124
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7551242019-03-05T16:04:26ZBodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940Martin, Claire Pauline LucieDossett, Kate M. ; Meyer, Jessica K.2018The production and diffusion of knowledge are heavily classed and gendered practices. This thesis examines some of the processes and power relations at the heart of the creation and diffusion of knowledge on sexuality and female physiology in the period 1900-1940. More specifically, it explores the tensions inherent to these processes along the lines of gender and class, by focussing on scientific discourse, popular culture, and the experience of Yorkshire working-class women in relation to menstruation, sex, pregnancy, and menopause. Spanning four decades marked by significant social, political, scientific, and cultural changes, this thesis reflects on the complex and ambivalent relationships between working-class women’s knowledge and experience, scientific or otherwise ‘expert’ knowledge, and cultural understandings and representations of women and their bodies in this period. By deliberately focussing on women’s voices and active contribution to these shifts and competing discourses, this thesis seeks to foreground their agency, and raises questions about what constitutes knowledge and expertise, the power relations which sustain those definitions, and how they are reproduced in the historical record. Through its regional focus, this thesis also engages with recent developments in the history of health and medicine and in the history of sexuality, and contributes to a more nuanced understanding of the lived experience of working-class sexuality in the past. Region, as well as class and gender, determined the material, social, and cultural conditions which shaped working-class women’s experience of sexuality and the life cycle, as well as their access and relationship to various forms and sources of knowledge.900University of Leedshttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.755124http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21490/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 900
spellingShingle 900
Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie
Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
description The production and diffusion of knowledge are heavily classed and gendered practices. This thesis examines some of the processes and power relations at the heart of the creation and diffusion of knowledge on sexuality and female physiology in the period 1900-1940. More specifically, it explores the tensions inherent to these processes along the lines of gender and class, by focussing on scientific discourse, popular culture, and the experience of Yorkshire working-class women in relation to menstruation, sex, pregnancy, and menopause. Spanning four decades marked by significant social, political, scientific, and cultural changes, this thesis reflects on the complex and ambivalent relationships between working-class women’s knowledge and experience, scientific or otherwise ‘expert’ knowledge, and cultural understandings and representations of women and their bodies in this period. By deliberately focussing on women’s voices and active contribution to these shifts and competing discourses, this thesis seeks to foreground their agency, and raises questions about what constitutes knowledge and expertise, the power relations which sustain those definitions, and how they are reproduced in the historical record. Through its regional focus, this thesis also engages with recent developments in the history of health and medicine and in the history of sexuality, and contributes to a more nuanced understanding of the lived experience of working-class sexuality in the past. Region, as well as class and gender, determined the material, social, and cultural conditions which shaped working-class women’s experience of sexuality and the life cycle, as well as their access and relationship to various forms and sources of knowledge.
author2 Dossett, Kate M. ; Meyer, Jessica K.
author_facet Dossett, Kate M. ; Meyer, Jessica K.
Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie
author Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie
author_sort Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie
title Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
title_short Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
title_full Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
title_fullStr Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
title_full_unstemmed Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940
title_sort bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in yorkshire, c.1900-1940
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.755124
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