Listen to Me Good: The Story of an Alabama Midwife

Listen to Me Good: The Story of an Alabama Midwife

Listen to Me Good: The Story of an Alabama Midwife

Listen to Me Good: The Story of an Alabama Midwife

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Overview

Margaret Charles Smith, a ninety-one-year-old Alabama midwife, has thousands of birthing stories to tell. Sifting through nearly five decades of providing care for women in rural Greene County, she relates the tales that capture the life-and-death struggle of the birthing experience and the traditions, pharmacopeia, and spiritual attitudes that influenced her practice. She debunks images of the complacent southern “granny” midwife and honors the determination, talent, and complexity of midwifery.

Fascinating to read, this book is part of the new genre of writing that recognizes the credibility of midwives who have emerged from their own communities and were educated through apprenticeship and personal experience. Past descriptions of southern black midwives have tended to denigrate their work in comparison with professional established medicine. Believed to be the oldest living (though retired) traditional African American midwife in Alabama, Smith is one of the few who can recount old-time birthing ways. Despite claims that midwives contributed to high infant mortality rates, Smith’s story emphasizes midwives' successes in facing medical challenges and emergencies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814281789
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 05/20/2021
Series: WOMEN & HEALTH C&S PERSPECTIVE
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 178
Sales rank: 886,026
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Margaret Charles Smith has spoken extensively about her years as a midwife at national midwifery conferences, folk festivals, and women’s health programs. In 1985 the Eutaw City Council proclaimed May 11th “Margaret Charles Smith Day,” and she became the first black person to receive the keys to the city.

Linda Janet Holmes, a former journalist, has worked for the New Jersey Department of Health, Division of Family Health Services, in Trenton. 
 

Table of Contents

LISTEN TO ME GOOD: THE STORY OF AN ALABAMA MIDWIFE by Margaret Charles Smith and Linda Janet Holmes Series Title Page Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Epigraph by Walker Contents Series Editors' Preface Acknowledgments Chronology Map of Alabama Introduction: Going to Greene County Research and Audiotaping Editing Place Marking Progress Back to Midwifery Epigraph by Smith Greene County in Slavery and in Freedom Alabama Medicine Motherless Child Lots of Work and Little Schooling Trapped in Greene County Seeing Flowers Old-Time Religion CHAPTER 2 · Pregnancy Medicinal Plants in Greene County Worldwide Cultural Traditions The Elders’ Ways Taking a Vow Reproductive Cycles Farming Domestic Work CHAPTER 3 · Official Midwife Hard Times Regular Paycheck Born Dead Normal Births Social Realities Problems with Collaboration Kicking up Heels for Birth Tight Places Ban on Teas Surviving Complications Segregated Health Systems An Emergency Case More Problems Medical Compromises Premature Baby CHAPTER 5 · Civil Rights Struggles for Change Long-Lasting Barriers Old Hunting Club Scratching out a Living Nursing the Elderly Freedom Now CHAPTER 6 · Last Days New-Age Births and Hospital Care Final Phase-Out Distant Justice Moving On Epilogue Bibliography Index Series Page
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