The assault on ignorance: teaching menstrual etiquette in England, c. 1920s to 1960s.

J. Strange
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

At the end of the nineteenth century, medical paradigms of menstruation were located in a language of pathology and disability. Women were, therefore, perceived as incapable of competing with men in the world of education, work, and economics on account of their erratic and debilitating biology. This essay examines the challenge posed to this vision of menstrual disability by female medical practitioners in the early decades of the twentieth century. The new narratives of menstruation authored by these women not only re-cast normative menstrual experience as non-disabling, but were also formulated on the basis of canvassing the opinions of healthy schoolgirls rather than developing theories based on clinical contact with a minority of women defined as 'ill'. Yet female practitioners remained tied to a culture of 'menstrual discretion', thus perpetuating the secrecy and taboo associated with menstruation in the nineteenth century. This essay explores the tensions inherent in striving to overturn an oppressive medical model of menstruation whilst promoting menstrual discretion, and aims to place such apparent contradictions within the context of cultural notions of gendered identity and feminine sexuality.
对无知的攻击:20世纪20年代至60年代英国教授经期礼仪。
在19世纪末,月经的医学范式是以病理学和残疾的语言为基础的。因此,女性被认为无法在教育、工作和经济领域与男性竞争,因为她们不稳定且虚弱的生理特征。这篇文章探讨了在二十世纪早期的几十年里,女性医生对这种月经障碍的看法提出的挑战。这些妇女撰写的关于月经的新叙述不仅将正常的月经经历重新定义为不会致残,而且是在征求健康女学生意见的基础上制定的,而不是根据与少数被定义为“生病”的妇女的临床接触制定的理论。然而,女性从业者仍然与“月经自由”的文化联系在一起,因此在19世纪,与月经有关的秘密和禁忌得以延续。这篇文章探讨了在努力推翻压抑的月经医学模式的同时促进月经自由裁量权所固有的紧张关系,并旨在将这种明显的矛盾置于性别认同和女性性行为的文化观念的背景下。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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