激进的护理:voetvroue和生殖健康快乐的恢复。

IF 2.4 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2025-08-26 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2025.1531915
Tamia Bianca Botes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

产科暴力根植于殖民医学的种族化和性别化逻辑,长期以来一直是约束生殖机构的工具。在19世纪南北战争前的奴隶制和开普殖民地,黑人妇女的身体都成为医学实验、监管和控制的场所。妇科成为种族制造的场所,取代了黑人自主助产士,并从官方医疗档案中抹去了她们的知识。然而,这种擦除从未完成。在埃尔多拉多公园(Eldorado Park),黑人自主助产士(voetvroue)培养了扎根于当地的生殖保健形式:治疗不孕症,促进分娩,制定家族和社区传承的仪式。借助档案研究和生活史访谈,本文追溯了医疗档案中“voetvroue”(即黑人自主助产士)的消失,并讨论了生育和产科在殖民时期的转变,使其成为一个监视、控制和暴力的场所。它讲述了三个voetvroue的生活-阿姨Faeeza,阿姨Rose和他们的祖母ouma -他们将她在埃尔多拉多公园的两室后屋改造成一个分娩空间,或“医院”。我认为,huis医院构成了一种激进的公共护理,它提供了一个对抗殖民生物医学逻辑的空间,不是通过公开的拒绝,而是通过快乐、尊严和代理的日常制定。在这里,快乐被概念化为情感、精神和关系:一种超越国家认可的护理范围的重新想象生殖正义的模式。通过激进护理的视角重新构建生殖健康,在面对持续的种族资本主义暴力时,为黑人生育妇女争取空间、知识和自主权。在这样做的过程中,他们重新审视了地方特有的知识和技术模式,并优先考虑分娩护理的整体方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Radical care: voetvroue and the reclamation of pleasure in reproductive health.

Obstetric violence, rooted in the racialised and gendered logics of colonial medicine, has long served as a tool for disciplining reproductive bodies. In both 19th-century Antebellum slavery and the Cape colony, Black women's bodies became sites of medical experimentation, regulation, and control. Gynaecology emerged as a site of race-making, displacing Black autonomous midwives and erasing their knowledge from official medical archives. Yet this erasure was never complete. In Eldorado Park, Black autonomous midwives, or voetvroue, have cultivated grounded, place-based forms of reproductive care: treating infertility, facilitating births, and enacting rituals transmitted along familial and communal lines. Drawing on archival research and life history interviews, this paper traces the erasure of "voetvroue", or Black autonomous midwives, from the medical archive and discusses the colonial transformation of birth and obstetrics into a site of surveillance, control, and violence. It follows the lives of three voetvroue-Aunty Faeeza, Aunt Rose, and their grandmother, Ouma-who re-fashioned her two-bedroom backroom in Eldorado Park into a birthing space, or "hospitaal". I argue that the huis-hospitaal constitutes a radical commons of care that offers a counter-space to colonial biomedical logics not through overt refusal but through the everyday enactment of pleasure, dignity, and agency. Here, pleasure is conceptualised as emotional, spiritual, and relational: a mode of re-imagining reproductive justice beyond the confines of state-sanctioned care. By reframing reproductive health through the lens of radical care, voetvroue reclaim space, knowledge, and autonomy for Black birthing women in the face of ongoing racial-capitalist violence. In doing so, they revalorise locale-specific modes of knowledge and technologies and prioritise holistic approaches to birthing care.

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CiteScore
3.70
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