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A Dead Woman, Pronatalism, and the Enlightenment

May 19, 2025 By Deena Leave a Comment

Yesterday, I had a conversation with my 16 year old daughter about college. I told her in no uncertain terms, that she should not apply for colleges in states with abortion bans and that the minute she thinks about sex with a boy, we should get her on birth control. She agreed, without any argument. My daughter should not have to limit herself because of fear, or because of laws that might harm or kill her, yet here we are.

The latest story out of Georgia, about Adriana Smith, who has been brain dead and kept on life support to be used as an incubator for a baby that may not be compatible with life, since the pregnancy was 9 weeks along, has shaken American women, myself and my daughter included, to the core. Ms. Smith had provided no consent for her body to be kept alive like this. Her family, her legal decision makers, do not consent to having her body used like this. Nor do they consent to burying a baby that didn’t need to suffer or consent to the astronomical medical bills. Informed consent and bodily autonomy are central to medical ethics. What the state of Georgia is doing is not only unethical, it is amoral, and cruel.

Ms. Smith’s story is straight out of Brave New World‘s hatchery, and it’s author, Aldous Huxley, was a lifelong eugenicist. Viewing or using women as “breeders” is pronatalism. Pronatalism, or natalism, is the belief that making more babies, typically of a specific kind, to increase the population is not only good, but a necessity. The online dictionaries and encyclopedias vary in their definitions. Some of them include anti-immigrant references, others touch on legal, or political references. Some places attempt to spin the definition into something positive including supports for families, daycare, financial incentives, etc. We can have additional social supports without pronatalism or pronatalist laws or policies.

What these definitions lack is historical context. That context includes the eugenics inherent in the term itself. The most directly relevant historical period is the interwar period in both Europe and the US. Which, as it happens, is when Brave New World was published. Before we get to that, we need to roll the clock back a bit further. The roots of eugenics, or proto-eugenics, began during the Enlightenment period, the late 17th and early 18th centuries, when there was little differentiation between science and philosophy. I’ll leave this as a teaser for the next post. Suffice it to say, what is happening now, to Adriana Smith, is part of a long thread anchored in history, but which runs through our modern laws, policies, and beliefs about women, pregnancy, and ethics.

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Filed Under: All Topics, History, Politics Tagged With: Childbirth, Eugenics, Feminism, Natalism, Pregnancy, Pronatalism

Marinating in Early 20th Century Maternity Care – Grantly Dick-Read Refines his Philosophy, Part 4

January 24, 2019 By Deena Leave a Comment

When Read looked into the state of maternity care in the early twentieth century in Britain, he found high rates of maternal and infant mortality as well as morbidities for both mother and child. This issue was also recognized by the British government. According to Lewis, “During World War I,it was realized that foetal and neonatal deaths were associated with the mother’s welfare, and the overwhelming desire to increase population caused infant welfare work to be extended to the ante-natal period.”[1] The need to repopulate Europe after the decimation of the population of Europe because of World War I, gave rise to a governmental push to procreate. Adding in to this mix, the end of World War I brought the end to the age of colonization.The great European explorers brought back new anthropological information about “savage” societies in the name of scientific study.

One notable example is George Englemann’s ethnographic survey of birthing practices throughout the Americas and Africa, entitled Labor Among Primitive Peoples: Showing the Development of the Obstetric Science of To-day, from the Natural and Instinctive Customs of All Races, Civilized and Savage, Past and Present (1882); a clear example of the notion of the noble savage. The book is rife with language and images describing tribal people’s methods of birthing babies with a subtle emphasis on how these primitive uncivilized people give birth more easily and, in less pain, than do their civilized white European and American counterparts.

Englemann, Labor Among Primitive Peoples

Read would have likely known about Englemann’s work, given his previous status as a founding member of the American Gynecological Society in 1876 and president in 1900, in addition to being an honorary member of many obstetric societies both in America and Europe.[2] The influence of the idea of the noble savage and its converse, the overcivilized woman is prevalent in Read’s writings.[3] Briggs defines “overcivilization” as; “hysterical illness was the provenance almost exclusively of Anglo-American, native born whites, specifically white women of a certain class.”[4]

Newell, writing in 1908, believed there was an abnormal type of labor happening among overcivilized women, which was causing their demise and that of their babies,thus leaving society with less desirable offspring from less desirable mothers.[5]  The symptoms therein being “prolapsed uterus,diseased ovaries, long and difficult childbirths – maladies that made it difficult for these hysterical (white) women to have children.”[6] These overcivilized women were Read’s target market for his method.

Read not only subscribed to this belief in the overcivilized woman and the noble savage but he also believed that there needed to be a return to a more natural way of giving birth and that modern society and its medical interventions, in many cases, caused more harm than good. Read believed that a return to natural childbirth would bring about not only a return to more natural order, but through his idea of “motherlove” also bring about peace on earth. According to Read, natural childbirth is a return to God’s plan for humanity.These concepts colored his writings and provide a foundation for his revelation of natural childbirth to be rooted in conventional societal beliefs.

Concurrent with Read’s work, The National Health in the UK was created specifically to combat the issues of maternal mortality and bring a greater focus on infant mortality. Through the National Conference on Infant Mortality, it was decided that maternal education held the solution.[7] Lewis also notes that working class mothers were “consigned to the vicissitudes of both the feeding bottle and the childminder.”[8]

Working class women needed to be better mothers by emulating their middle class counter parts through education, birth and motherhood thus improving their race. Read was swimming in this miasma of eugenics and religion and it is very clearly seen in his book.

Moreover, a new “twilight sleep” anesthesia had hit the market in 1914 and was sold to women as painless birth, with the true intention to bring women out of the home and into the hospital for birth as part of the legitimization of the profession of obstetrics.[9] The challenge being that twilight sleep was a scopolamine – morphine combination that provided mild pain relief and a hallucinogenic, which provided an amnesiac effect, such that women could not remember their births.[10]

A Twilight Sleep Labor

Read, being familiar with the administration of these medications as well as being familiar with homebirth, since he attended births both in hospital and out,decided that something critical was lost for women with the loss of the birthing experience. This he attributed in his revelation where returning to a more natural, less medically interventive order would be humanity’s saving, and he, the prophet, would be its savior.

Read was a man of no small ego. When reading his biography, Dr. Courageous (1957), it is apparent that the writing style is suspiciously similar to that of Childbirth without Fear, Read’s own book. It is suspected, and I agree, that Read had heavy influence with the author and possibly wrote certain passages himself. His biography/autobiography reads like an origin story for any strong religious figure be that Buddha, Jesus, Moses or Mohammed. He lists his credentials like the begets in the bible, to prove his lineage and his worth. He speaks and acts like a prophet, tells stories of miracles (i.e. the testimonials from mothers), offers strong dogmatic defense of his faith and uses his priesthood of believers (the mothers) to share the information which was given to him as a direct revelation from God to make a new peace on earth.His method and his writings are the only way to salvation.

This sets the tone for his becoming a prophet and a savior not only of women and childbirth but of humanity as a whole. In such a manner, Read begins to segregate himself from his medical colleagues setting himself up to become a deviant in the medical community.

Next up: Martyrdom – But Through Faith Alone… Where’s the Evidence?


[1] Lewis, J. (1980), The politics of motherhood, child and maternal welfare in England, 1900-1939, p.33

[2] Dunn, P.M. (1995), Dr. George Englemann of St. Louis (1847-1903) and the ethnology of childbirth. p. 145

[3] Read, G.D. (1942), Childbirth without Fear, p. 20-21

[4] Briggs, L. (2000), The race of hysteria: “Overcivilization” and the “savage” woman in late nineteenth-century obstetrics and gynecology, p. 246

[5] Newell, F. S., (1908), The effects of overcivilization on maternity, p. 533

[6] Ibid, p. 534

[7] Lewis, J. (1980), The politics of motherhood, child and maternal welfare in England, 1900-1939, p.61

[8] ibid

[9] Wolf, J. H. (2009), Deliver me from Pain, Anesthesia and Birth in America, p. 61 – 63

[10] Sandelowski, M. (1984), Pain, Pleasure and American Childbirth, from Twilight Sleep to the Read Method 1914-1960, p. 13

Bibliography, Deena Blumenfeld, The Silent Mother, Dr. Grantly Dick-ReadDownload

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Filed Under: All Topics, History Tagged With: Dr. Grantly Dick-Read, Eugenics, Faith, History of Pregnancy & Childbirth, Medical Anthropology, Medicine, Natural Childbirth, Pregnancy, Religion, science, Scopolamine

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