Birth as a Spiritual Initiation: Australian Women's Experiences of Transformation

In Western, industrialised culture, menstruation and birth are generally seen as medical concerns. Women learn to detach from their menstrual rhythms which become associated with shame, pathology and the profane. Obstetric medicine, which is widely accepted as the norm for our birth practices, does...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moloney, Sharon (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: AASR [2009]
In: Australian religion studies review
Year: 2009, Volume: 22, Issue: 2, Pages: 190-213
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Volltext (doi)

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520 |a In Western, industrialised culture, menstruation and birth are generally seen as medical concerns. Women learn to detach from their menstrual rhythms which become associated with shame, pathology and the profane. Obstetric medicine, which is widely accepted as the norm for our birth practices, does not regard spirituality as its remit. Yet pre-patriarchal and non-patriarchal cultures have revered both menstruation and childbirth as spiritual phenomena. My doctoral research examined the links between Western cultural attitudes to menstruation and spirituality, and women's experiences of birth. Using the Organic Inquiry methodology, I conducted ten interviews and seven groups with Australian women to explore the spirituality of their female body experiences. My findings reveal that despite the presence of patriarchal constraints, some women transcended the cultural givens and discovered the ecstatic potential of their embodied spirituality. Menstruation was experienced as a sacred connection with the Divine and birth was a transformative opening to Spirit. 
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