In order to answer the question "how to build the experience of motherhood in popular urban community in Recife? we rely particularly on the contributions of two authors: the theory of social experience by Dubet, and sociology of the generation by Luc Boltanski. These theoretical approaches are articulated with three dimensions: a temporal dimension, which highlights not only the historical context in which the experiment takes place, but especially the diachronic nature of the experience itself; and a relational dimension, which highlights not only on the relationship between mother and child, but also those that grow with various groups or networks that are created around the child and mother. Thus our research protocol takes a new turn to break away without losing much of what is the theoretical basis of our research itself. Why is the issue of space needed for us to understand the experience of motherhood in the women of a city's working-class?
[...] Yet as a young researcher, with little experience in fieldwork and to cope with these setbacks, a malaise has emerged from this use of false pretenses, the confrontation with the bureaucracy of health services in the city and transposition of the research protocol that was my only dear "baggage" when I arrived in the city. It took a while for me to realize I could overcome these barriers, and I could also benefit. Barriers and Strategies: How to interpret? From the first draft of the fieldwork we can see that not only are women from working class backgrounds in Recife is some logic in the selection of public health services but they also deploy certain strategies to gain access. [...]
[...] At these consultations must be added monthly visits to their homes Agentes de Saúde (health) cards which control their pregnancy weight, diet, etc., and training on breastfeeding, which are mandatory in certain maternity hospitals in penalty for refusal to support women at the time of birth. On the other hand I walked into town, I returned to the neighborhood hospitals to conduct informal interviews with women who circulated and comments, as a spy, always staying in the vicinity of an area still banned: maternity. [...]
[...] Take bus number in the day to visit the institution, phone and nobody answers, guide me to the direction of the institution, talk with a manager who sent me to another person, find this " good person "and expect it to be present and available, are some tasks that gradually, not only helped me find my way around the huge buildings and get used to the institutional context of motherhood but also m ' have faced the city and public services in another way, either as an observer "outside" but as a user of "inside". [...]
[...] The delayed access to maternity: solutions out of the galley Taking into account this problem I decided to start my comments in three maternity hospitals in the city of Recife, selected according to some criteria: the characteristics of the population in neighborhoods adjacent location in the city (in relation to different neighborhoods, distance and connecting with other health services, as well as the more or less ease of access), the reputation of the institution, the bed capacity and the various services offered by these institutions. [...]
[...] Cantor Magnani G., "De perto e de dentro: notas para uma etnografia urbana," Revista Brasileira de Ciências Sociais, vol No February 2002 R. Da Matta, A & A Casa Rua. Espaço, Cidadania, mulher e morte no Brasil, [1985] 5 º ed, Rio de Janeiro, Rocco p 11-29 Dubet Francis, Sociology of experience, Paris, Seuil F. Dubet, Sociology of experience, Paris, Seuil L. Boltanski, The fetal condition. A sociology of procreation and abortion, Paris, Gallimard p17 Source: SINASC, Secretaria de Saúde Recife If we take [...]
APA Style reference
For your bibliographyOnline reading
with our online readerContent validated
by our reading committee