Golden, 'Birth, Death, and Motherhood in Classical Greece', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9412
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9412-golden-birth
@@@@94.12.2, Demand, Birth, Death, and Motherhood
Nancy Demand, Birth, Death, and Motherhood in
Classical Greece. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1994. Pp. xx + 276. $39.95. ISBN
0-8018-4762-1.
Reviewed by Mark Golden -- University of Winnipeg
Nancy Demand's thesis is straightforward: Greek
women bore children early and often, this was unhealthy and
known to be so by the men who controlled them, "at least in
the extreme patriarchal form that it took in Athens and many
other poleis, the Greek polis was
detrimental to the interests of both women and polis"
(154). Its presentation starts from a useful summary chapter
on the lives of Greek women. Most important for Demand's
argument are the tendency of medical writings to incorporate
cultural constructions of gender--the Hippocratics viewed
women as essentially passive in childbirth despite observing
birth contractions (19)--the high reproductive rate, estimated
at over six births per woman (21), and men's concern to
guarantee the legitimacy of their children (22). The following
two chapters characterize the Hippocratic Epidemics
and sketch their evidence for attitudes towards and treatments
of female patients. Here as elsewhere in the Hippocratic
Corpus there is much material developed by and derived from
women, but shaped by "the value-laden conceptual screen of
traditional Greek male assumptions" (65). And as men
appropriated women's knowledge, so too they took over the
care of pregnant women, raising the status of female midwives
who worked along with them and lowering that of those
without such links. Doctors' belief that women's wombs were
prone to wander without the moisture and fullness provided
by intercourse, and pregnancy supplied a medical justification
for what fathers and husbands wanted, early marriage and
regular parturition. The interests of kyrioi also
influenced the Hippocratic outlook on abortion, a procedure
doctors undertook rarely and then only with the consent of a
husband or owner.[[1]] The "medicalization" of childbirth had
little effect on obstetric risk, which remained high. Demand
finds the symptoms of puerperal infection in
Epidemics (though few cases of toxemia, another
common cause of maternal mortality before the antibiotic age,
and none of hemorrhage), and persuasively explicates the role
of pregnancy in reducing immunity to endemic diseases,
especially malaria (chapter 4). Nor was it the only model of
care: women's first recourse for "female problems" remained
the gods, Artemis in particular, and often enough the
manteis, women among them, whose religious
quackery so threatened and enraged the Hippocratics (chapter
5).
If early marriage had important advantages in the eyes
of Greek males, seized as they were with the need to
safeguard the honor of the oikos by guaranteeing the
chastity of its women and the authority of its men, how were
women reconciled to it? Chapter 6 discusses three means of
acculturation: the theory of the wandering womb, understood
here as a cure for girls' anxiety about marriage; the
arkteia and similar coming-of-age ceremonies
(Demand accepts the usual view that Athenian arktoi
were ten and older, sand uggests that only an elite few served
at Brauron itself); and the Thesmophoria. Here the myth of
Demeter and Persephone delivered "a powerful message of
reconciliation to female losses in marriage" (115). One
inducement to motherhood Demand denies (chapter 7):
despite the current consensus, Greeks did not equate the
death of a childbearing woman to that of a man in battle,
either as a matter of public policy (Sparta) or in private life
(Athens). On the contrary, the iconography of Attic and
Atticizing tombstones distinguishes such women, passive and
pitiable, from the heroized men shown as warriors in action.
(And some stones taken to depict women who died in
childbirth probably commemorate midwives.) Indeed, far from
glorifying motherhood, Greek men denigrated women's role,
going so far as to deny them a significant share in
reproduction, and appropriated their procreativity through the
metaphor of male pregnancy (Socrates the midwife of ideas)
and the representation of pederasty as a means of completing
the necessary masculinization of males. "For the Greeks,
giving birth to actual infants, very likely ephemeral
creatures...did not compare in importance with giving birth to
'real men' (or to poems, laws or philosophical truths, all
accomplishments of men)" (140). This lack of interest in young
children is reflected in the failure to develop a pediatrics;
children of all ages are underrepresented among patients in
Epidemics, and those who feature in the cases the
doctors report are usually older, often already at work
(chapter 8). Their medical care was usually left to women.
The main text of the book is followed by twelve plates of
tombstones and funerary lekythoi, an appendix setting out the
data on female and pregnancy-related cases in
Epidemics, another translating cases involving
pregnancy--very valuable, this, in view of the difficulty of
many of the texts Demand discusses--, fifty-something pages of
notes, a glossary of medical terms, a bibliography, a general
index and a Hippocratic index locorum. There are
more typos and slips than in other volumes of the series
Ancient Society and History I've seen; a few may
confuse, such as the ascription to M.B. Wallace of a view he
refutes (220 n. 2).
This book contains much that is true; but it is not
always the whole truth or nothing but the truth. The
treatment of the male appropriation of birth seems
particularly partial. Demand notes, but does not sufficiently
stress, that Hippocratic writers tend to reject the "incubator"
theory and to acknowledge women's contribution to the
makeup of the child; she omits any mention of Pericles'
Citizenship Law in this context--where it might reflect a
community preference for the Hippocratic view--and cites it
instead as evidence for a supposed increase in male anxiety
over the control of women during "the Hippocratic period"
(148); and she ignores women's role in readmitting those given
up for dead into society through a process of rebirth, a
practice which may motivate Odysseus's mysterious appeal to
Queen Arete in Odyssey 7.[[2]] This whole section
puts too much weight on the initiatory character of Greek
pederasty and its New Guinea analogues and too little on
those anthropological studies of sex-segregated societies which
read childbirth rituals as "a form of psychological
warfare...used when opportunities for more direct forms of
conflict and more explicit bargaining are restricted."[[3]] Nor is
it true that Epidemics reveal changes over time in
the percentages of female and pregnancy-related cases the
doctors report (48). There is no statistically significant
difference in the proportion of female cases in the three
groups into which Epidemics is generally divided,
Books I and III (410-400 BCE), Books II, IV and VI
(400-375) and Books V and VII (375/360-350). The incidence
of pregnancy-related cases does differ, but is almost identical
in the first two groups--only the third is anomalous. Besides,
even if the rate of reporting were significantly different,
Demand's perceptive account of the nature of
Epidemics--the products of at least three authors and
probably more, who chose both which cases to take and
which to write up--reveals that time is only one possible
variable. In general, Demand is less successful in solving some
problems of method than her sound grasp of the difficulties
would suggest. She confronts the problems the distribution of
her evidence poses for a book on classical Greece as a whole,
yet writes that a woman divorced as unfaithful would lose her
dowry (12) without any indication that such penalties are
reliably attested only for Ephesus, and no earlier than the
third century BCE at that. She recognizes the pitfalls of
comparisons with modern Greek village life (186 n. 24, 187 n.
8) and warns of regional variation in pre-industrial
populations (206 n. 4), yet seems at times to invoke such
villages and their customs at random and in neglect of crucial
differences. (How relevant can it be to classical Greece, where
there was ready access to slaves and most citizens owned
some land, that modern Greeks pay a dowry premium to
avoid farm work and marry into town [12]?) Such slackness
surprises in so good a scholar. It is perhaps signalled already
in the historiographical introduction, where the pattern of
fifth-century Greek history is said to confirm "the larger
hypothesis of a connection between state formation and the
subordination of women," and the takeover of female lore
about childbearing by Hippocratic gynecology to have had
effects that extend to the present day (xx). The book itself,
however, has nothing to say about state formation (which
surely must antedate the classical period); and the charge that
the misogyny and marginalization of women which marks so
much of modern medicine is to be laid against the Greeks
hides from history the women who worked as physicians and
surgeons as late as the fifteenth century in Italy and elsewhere
and, as midwives, controlled childbirth and introduced their
methods into medical practice two thousand years after that
"crucial point in women's history...in the formative days of
Western medicine and culture" (69).[[4]]
Nancy Demand has written three books: Thebes in
the Fifth Century: Heracles Resurgent (l982), Urban
Relocation in Archaic and Classical Greece: Flight and
Consolidation (l990), and now this one--an admirable
range of subjects which testifies to her energy and learning.
Birth, Death, and Motherhood further differs from
its predecessors in appearing without the usual signs of
professional pregnancy, journal articles. Environmental
friendliness? (After all, it is not only philosophers who wonder
about the fate of trees falling in the forest these days.) A
product of the culture of American history departments,
notorious (among Canadian classicists anyway) as the natural
habitat of the People of the Book? At any rate, while this
latest book is both welcome and helpful, it might have
become still more so through the debate and development
ideally prompted by a body of accessible work on her theme.
Some of Birth, Death, and Motherhood in Classical
Greece--the discussions of abortion, of the iconography
of death, of the arkteia, comments on miraculous
cures credited to Asclepius (93-94), on the subjectivity of
judgements on rates of maternal mortality (206 n. 4)--meets
the high standard set by her earlier work. The book as a
whole does not.
NOTES
[[1]] This excellent account [57-63] would have been
strengthened by reference to J.S. Murray, "The Alleged
Prohibition of Abortion in the Hippocratic Oath," EMC
35 (1991) 293-311.
[[2]] Plut. Mor. 264F-265A, Hsch. s.
deuteropotmos; R.M. Newton, "The Rebirth of
Odysseus," GRBS 25 (1984) 5-20.
[[3]] K.E. and J.M. Paige, The Politics of Reproductive
Ritual (Berkeley 1981) 48, cf. now S.S. Sered,
"Husbands, Wives, and Childbirth Rituals," Ethos 22
(1994) 187-208.
[[4]] See, e.g., T.G. Benedek, "The Roles of Medieval
Women in the Healing Arts," in D. Radcliff-Umstead, ed.,
The Roles and Images of Women in the Middle Ages and
the Renaissance (University of Pittsburgh Publications on
the Middle Ages and the Renaissance 3 [1975]) 145-159; S.
Shahar, The Fourth Estate. A History of Women in the
Middle Ages (trans. C. Galai: London and New York
1983) 201-203; M.E. Wiesner, "Women's Defense of their
Public Role," in M.B. Rose, ed., Women in the Middle
Ages and the Renaissance (Syracuse 1986) 1-27; H.
Lemay, "Women and the Literature of Obstetrics and
Gynecology," in J.T. Rosenthal, ed., Medieval Women
and the Sources of Medieval History (Athens, GA and
London 1990) 189-209.