Abstract

This paper analyses the birthing narratives of 50 Australian women to explore their representations of their birthing experiences. Through the analysis, issues of power, identity and control in childbirth are explored, particularly with respect to the major discursive categories framing childbirth. The birthing narratives of the women in this study revealed significant differences in orientation to first birth according to women’s social class, but also revealed significant shifts in identity and empowerment with subsequent births. These findings differ significantly from existing accounts of power relations in childbirth, which have tended either to universalise women, or, in more recent post‐structuralist accounts, to abandon the notion of socially structured differences between women altogether. The findings of this research indicate that social class has a strong effect in the shaping of identity, but that these differences can be transcended by the experience of childbirth itself, which is a critical reflexive moment in many women’s lives.

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