"Just forget about it and move on": Stillbirth ruptured and repaired narratives beyond expectant futures.
Shvat EilatPublished in: Sociology of health & illness (2024)
The critical sociological literature has explored social prescriptions on women's reproductive lives, trajectories, outcomes and aftermaths. However, little attention has been given to how these prescriptions are expressed through temporal negotiations. This article delves into the narratives of Jewish-Israeli women who have experienced stillbirths. In their narratives, these women contest expectations directed towards them in interactions with professionals, family and friends. Within these expectations, a form of dictation over their future comes into being, where a new pregnancy should quickly precede the stillbirth. The focus here lies on how these women navigate and contest these temporal expectations, carving out space for stillbirth as a meaningful and painful event that should be granted attention and for alternative forms of remembering their stillborn and caring for them after their death. They reshape their narratives through what I call "thickening a present tense" and extend care to the stillborn in the aftermath of the stillbirth. This work contributes to scholarly inquiries into reproductive life and probing time as a socially prescribed mechanism for the value and social distribution of care.
Keyphrases
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- cervical cancer screening
- breast cancer risk
- systematic review
- palliative care
- mental health
- pregnant women
- depressive symptoms
- quality improvement
- insulin resistance
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- skeletal muscle
- chronic pain
- affordable care act
- adipose tissue
- health insurance