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  • Medical Bondage

  • Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology
  • Written by: Deirdre Cooper Owens
  • Narrated by: Allyson Johnson
  • Length: 5 hrs and 39 mins
  • 4.2 out of 5 stars (9 ratings)

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Medical Bondage

Written by: Deirdre Cooper Owens
Narrated by: Allyson Johnson
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Publisher's Summary

The accomplishments of pioneering doctors such as John Peter Mettauer, James Marion Sims, and Nathan Bozeman are well documented. It is also no secret that these 19th-century gynecologists performed experimental caesarean sections, ovariotomies, and obstetric fistula repairs primarily on poor and powerless women. Medical Bondage breaks new ground by exploring how and why physicians denied these women their full humanity yet valued them as "medical superbodies" highly suited for medical experimentation.

In Medical Bondage, Cooper Owens examines a wide range of scientific literature and less formal communications in which gynecologists created and disseminated medical fictions about their patients, such as their belief that black enslaved women could withstand pain better than white "ladies". Even as they were advancing medicine, these doctors were legitimizing, for decades to come, groundless theories related to whiteness and blackness, men and women, and the inferiority of other races or nationalities.

Medical Bondage moves between southern plantations and northern urban centers to reveal how 19th-century American ideas about race, health, and status influenced doctor-patient relationships in sites of healing like slave cabins, medical colleges, and hospitals.

©2017 the University of Georgia Press (P)2019 Tantor

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Lots of information but repetitive

Reads like a thesis. Lots of information and we’ll cited which is good. Good comparison between treatment of slave women and Irish immigrant women. However the book could have been at least one hour shorter. It was very very repetitive.

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