Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
Pregnancy seems to be experienced as the radical ordeal of the splitting of the subject: redoubling up of the body, separation and coexistence of the self and of an other, of nature and consciousness, of physiology and speech. This fundamental challenge to identity is then accompanied by a fantasy of totality – narcissistic completeness – a sort of instituted, socialized, natural psychosis. The arrival of the child, on the other hand, leads the mother into the labyrinths of an experience that, without the child, she would only rarely encounter: love for an other. Not for herself, nor for an identical human being, and still less for another person with whom “I” fuse (love or sexual passion). But the slow, difficult, and delightful apprenticeship in attentiveness, gentleness, forgetting oneself. The ability to succeed in this path without masochism and without annihilating one's affective, intellectual, and professional personality – such would seem to be the stakes to be won through guiltless maternity.
Julia Kristeva, “Women's Time”You marvel at the age, at the ferment of its gigantic power, at its violent convulsions, and don't know what new births to expect.
Friedrich Schlegel, Ideas 5Personal as well as professional interests informed this project from the outset. Indeed, I believe that this monograph began to germinate long before I found a vehicle through which to convey my thoughts about historical shifts in the “invention of maternity,” to adopt Susan Greenfield's and Carol Barash's terms.
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