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Georgia State University

Sociology Dissertations

Theses/Dissertations

Medicalization

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What Makes Trans Lives More Livable?: An Intersectional Content Analysis Of #Wehappytrans* And #Thegendertag, Jordan F. Miller May 2022

What Makes Trans Lives More Livable?: An Intersectional Content Analysis Of #Wehappytrans* And #Thegendertag, Jordan F. Miller

Sociology Dissertations

Building on previous trans YouTube scholarship, this dissertation is based on a content analysis of two digital activism projects: 1) #WeHappyTrans*, a compilation of 59 YouTube video responses posted between 2012 and 2018, and 2) #TheGenderTag, a compilation of 704 YouTube video responses posted between 2016 and 2019. By analyzing the audio and visuals of a subsample (N=80) of these two archives using theoretical and emerging codes, I identified key themes as relevant to digital activism effectiveness and well-being. I discuss implications for policy, public health, healthcare, and community organizing in the conclusion. Contrasting prior medical sociology literature that is …


"Why Even Bother? They Are Not Going To Do It": Racism And Medicalization In The Lactation Profession, Erin V. Thomas May 2017

"Why Even Bother? They Are Not Going To Do It": Racism And Medicalization In The Lactation Profession, Erin V. Thomas

Sociology Dissertations

Research confirms that breastfeeding disparities persist and that lactation consultants play a key role in reducing them. However, there continues to be a limited availability of International Board Certified Lactation Consultants (IBCLCs) in the US with racial minorities in particular facing persistent barriers in the certification process. Through semi-structured interviews with 36 IBCLCs across the US, this study takes a systematic look at breastfeeding disparities through the lens of the IBCLC. Specifically, this study addresses barriers to certification and employment discrimination faced by IBCLCs of color, race-based discrimination against patients, and the ways in which IBCLCs work to both medicalize …


From No Hope To Fertile Dreams: Procreative Technologies, Popular Media, And The Culture Of Infertility, Evelina W. Sterling May 2013

From No Hope To Fertile Dreams: Procreative Technologies, Popular Media, And The Culture Of Infertility, Evelina W. Sterling

Sociology Dissertations

Throughout history, both popular and scholarly literature depicted infertility as a devastating experience in a woman’s life. Infertility was unbearable, filled with stigma, and a perpetual state of conflict between those who cannot have children and the rest of the world who can. Until recently as treatments for infertility developed, families assumed childlessness as hopeless. While the process of overcoming infertility is still arduous, unpleasant and unpredictable, many options are available today to overcome infertility and have children. As a result, the portrayal of involuntary childlessness and infertility especially by popular media, changed significantly over the years. Current procreative technologies …


Postpartum Depression: Standardizing Motherhood?, Pamela J. Regus May 2012

Postpartum Depression: Standardizing Motherhood?, Pamela J. Regus

Sociology Dissertations

Postpartum Depression: Standardizing Motherhood?

by

Pamela J. Regus

Under the Direction of Wendy S. Simonds

ABSTRACT

An expansion of the medicalization of Postpartum Depression (PPD) is evident in increased screening for maternal depression that begins in pregnancy and continues in the postpartum period, and in the growing number of medical professionals alerted to watch for signs of maternal distress. Although a definitive etiology ofPPDremains elusive, the scientific and medical fields – highly imbued with authority to create knowledge in Western society – promote essentialist views of motherhood that espouse “natural” attributes such as maternal instincts and tendencies to nurture. Mothers …


Not Trying: Reconceiving The Motherhood Mandate, Kristin J. Wilson Dec 2009

Not Trying: Reconceiving The Motherhood Mandate, Kristin J. Wilson

Sociology Dissertations

Infertile and childless women think about, live with, and defend their status as mothers and as nonmothers, arguably more so than other women for whom motherhood comes about accidentally or relatively easily in accordance with a plan. Within this group of infertile and childless women are those who are otherwise socially marginalized by factors like class, race, age, marital status, and sexual identity. This dissertation asks about the ways in which marginalized infertile and childless women in America make sense of their situations given the climate of “stratified reproduction” in which the motherhood mandate excludes them or applies to them …