Book contents
- Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
- Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- I Interpreting the Private under National Socialism
- II The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft
- III The Private at War
- 10 Personal Relationships between Harmony and Alienation
- 11 Working on the Relationship
- 12 Love Letters from Front and Home*
- 13 ‘A Birth Is Nothing Out of the Ordinary Here… ’
- 14 Transformations of the ‘Private’
- Bibliography
- Index
13 - ‘A Birth Is Nothing Out of the Ordinary Here… ’
Mothers, Midwives and the Private Sphere in the ‘Reichsgau Wartheland’, 1939–1945*
from III - The Private at War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 June 2019
- Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
- Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- I Interpreting the Private under National Socialism
- II The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft
- III The Private at War
- 10 Personal Relationships between Harmony and Alienation
- 11 Working on the Relationship
- 12 Love Letters from Front and Home*
- 13 ‘A Birth Is Nothing Out of the Ordinary Here… ’
- 14 Transformations of the ‘Private’
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter examines birth customs and bodily experiences and practices as an important but rarely considered dimension of private life under Nazism, setting them in the context of the complex racial and ethnic hierarchies created by Nazi occupation policy in Poland. It outlines the power relations and practices associated with women giving birth in the Nazi-annexed Polish territory of the ‘Reichsgau Wartheland’, and focuses in particular on the relationship between ethnic German (Volksdeutsche) women giving birth and the German and Polish midwives they sought out to assist them. Efforts by Reich German midwives to control events in the birth room sometimes faced fierce opposition on the part of the women giving birth, who asserted their right to privacy and to choose persons they trusted to be present at the birth. While the Nazi regime sought to exclude Polish midwives from attending German women giving birth, the supply of German midwives was inadequate. Polish midwives therefore continued to practise, though their precarious status made them vulnerable to harassment by the occupation authorities and accusations by Volksdeutsche of malpractice.
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- Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany , pp. 304 - 330Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019