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4 - Environmental constraints on infant care practices

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2009

Eleanor Hollenberg Chasdi
Affiliation:
Wheelock College, Massachusetts
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Summary

This article deals with the first two steps in the model for psychocultural research described in the previous selection (J. Whiting 1973). The steps can be summarized as follows:

  1. Features in the history of any society and in the natural environment in which it is situated influence

  2. the customary methods by which infants are cared for in that society, which have

  3. enduring psychological and physiological effects on the members of that society, which are manifested in

  4. the cultural projective–expressive systems of the society and the physiques of its members.

This chapter will focus on a detailed exploration of the variations in infant care by region, an analysis of the way in which they are patterned and how they are constrained by climate. The following world tour through the ethnographic reports describing infant care practices will make more meaningful the scales to be used in the formal analysis.

In Africa, infants after the lying-in period and before they become active toddlers spend most of their waking hours during the day on someone's back – usually the mother's, sometimes an older sister's. They are held in place by a shawl or animal skin, the ends of which are either passed diagonally over one of the carrier's shoulders and tied in front or passed under both arms and tied above the mother's breasts. The former method permits the infant to be brought around to the side to be held astride the carrier's hip rather than on the back.

Type
Chapter
Information
Culture and Human Development
The Selected Papers of John Whiting
, pp. 107 - 134
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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