c.2018, University Press of Mississippi
$30
193 pages

The mailmanโ€™s come and gone for today.

He never brings you much anymore anyhow, just a few bills and a card sometimes; now and then, you might get a box of something you purchased and thatโ€™s always fun. You know, though, that the mailman doesnโ€™t always bring you what you ordered. As in โ€œDelivered by Midwivesโ€ by Jenny M. Luke, someone else brings a different kind of package.

At the turn of the last century, if you were an African American woman and you were pregnant, you might have struggled with more than just labor: white doctors simply didnโ€™t have to treat Black patients if they didnโ€™t want to. Because of this, โ€œmany African American women in the Jim Crow South had no expectation of medical care for pregnancy and childbirth.โ€

And so, as did their foremothers when they were slaves, laboring women relied on โ€œgranny midwivesโ€ to โ€œcatchโ€ their babies. Doing so was a natural conclusion, says Luke, since both men and women in early Black communities were โ€œauthorized to be healers,โ€ which was โ€œa power that the white medical establishment could not undermine.โ€

What the white establishment could do, however, was to point out the high rate of maternal and infant death in Black communities. Because of this, laws were made in the 1920s to regulate midwives of all races. Classes on hygiene and cleanliness were taught to help improve the health of the most poverty-stricken mothers and their families, and joining a โ€œmidwife clubโ€ was mandatory.

As World War II began, however, so did the perception that not calling a doctor for a babyโ€™s birth indicated โ€œan indifferent negligence towardโ€ the child. Black mothers still reached out to midwives but it was increasingly becoming โ€œa marker of statusโ€ and more โ€œโ€˜scientific’โ€ to have a hospital birth. By 1970, and though racism persisted and โ€œhospital care and medical expertise were โ€ฆ not expectations of African Americans โ€ฆโ€ nine out of 10 Black women delivered their babies in hospitals.

The tide is turning back again, says author Jenny M. Luke, but there are issues โ€” specifically, educational requirements for professional midwives have become steeper, which can lead to questions of affordability. Still, in โ€œDelivered by Midwives,โ€ she shows a continued need for midwives, especially in poorer communities โ€” though getting to that point here can sometimes feel a lot like labor.

Luke moves her history at a good pace before repetition forces everything to slow down, then it speeds up again, so things move quickly inside this book โ€” and then they donโ€™t. Weโ€™re treated to painful, wincing tales of past midwives and what their patients endured, and those things might make you scream before you hurry-up-and-wait for relevant-but-scholarly information that slows the process down. It ends in a somewhat-frazzling, acronym-laden whoosh.

That doesnโ€™t make this a bad book โ€” it makes this informative and interesting, good for students and prospective midwives, but not a curl-up-by-the-fire something to read. Still, if itโ€™s the kind of medical, African American, or feminist history youโ€™re looking for, โ€œDelivered by Midwifeโ€ is the total package.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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