Synopses & Reviews
Pregnant women have always dreaded the pain of childbirth and have done just about anything to avoid feeling it. Five thousand years ago, the Egyptians and Indians made use of opium, from which we would later derive morphine. The Greeks chewed willow bark, the predecessor to aspirin. The people of the Andes had their cocoa leaves, the basis for cocaine. And myrrh might not have been just for the baby Jesus. Women have drunk wine and poppy juice, eaten mandrake and hemp. They've been hypnotized, offered Demerol, Nubain, and Stadol. Drugs aside, many in myth and reality have sworn they would give up anything to avoid the agony of childbirth. Even sex. The Greek goddess Actemia was terrified by her mother's suffering at her own birth and so she asked Zeus the favor of eternal virginity. Actemia changed her mind though, seduced Endymion, and ended up giving birth to fifty daughters. Mere mortals, also unable to resist the lures of sex, have eaten strange things--including cassowary anus or swamp eel, hoping to make the birth canal slippery--to reduce the pain.... Indigenous peoples, from Siberia to the Sudan, would demand confessions from the woman in labor. Did she commit adultery? If she did not answer truthfully, they believed, her birth would be extremely painful.
Synopsis
The engaging and eye-opening story of how we and our ancestors entered the world.
Through the frigid, blurry January weeks after George was born, I found myself suddenly housebound with time to ruminate - though not time to cook or take a shower. When George was peaceful, my mind returned to that nagging question: why is birth so hit and miss after all this time? I needed to put into perspective my own experience. I needed to know what other women, in other cultures, in other times had done.
Birth is a book that will open the eyes of even the most informed experts on the subject. Cassidy looks at every aspect of childbirth - from fathers and mothers to doctors and widwives across the centuries - with admirable objectivity in a work that is utterly gripping, occasionally shocking and essential reading for the human race.
Synopsis
What is the best way to give birth? Find out in this wonderfully readable, encyclopedic history of Birth. It fills a large gap in the market and will appeal to all men and women who are starting a family, as well as to those who are simply curious.
Synopsis
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