TY - JOUR
T1 - Childless in the land of imperative motherhood
T2 - Stigma and coping among infertile Israeli women
AU - Remennick, Larissa
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Drawing on Goffman's stigma framework, this in-depth study explored the experiences of 26 infertile Jewish women in Israel, the country with a strong pronatalist ideology, both institutional and popular. The findings are in fine with the key postulates of the stigma concept: women's coping strategies included selective disclosure, avoidance of exposure of their "hidden disability," and other information management techniques. Infertility became a "master status" for these women, undermining any other merits and achievements they might have. Most women fully internalized and endorsed the pronatalist discourse by way of pursuing long-term and burdensome infertility treatments, at any personal cost. The paper argues that resistance to stigma of infertility is only possible where women dare question the motherhood imperative, which is clearly not the case with most Israelis. Material and mental resources needed for resisting the stigma of infertility are found among few educated professional women. The paper suggests three theoretical inferences: (a) stigma as a psychological response is graded by the extent of individual's conformity with the dominant norms; (b) the stigma of childlessness is most devastating for the less educated women without career or other nonfamilial aspirations; and (c) in pronatalist societies, the coping and management approach to the study of infertility is more relevant than the resistance approach suggested by some authors.
AB - Drawing on Goffman's stigma framework, this in-depth study explored the experiences of 26 infertile Jewish women in Israel, the country with a strong pronatalist ideology, both institutional and popular. The findings are in fine with the key postulates of the stigma concept: women's coping strategies included selective disclosure, avoidance of exposure of their "hidden disability," and other information management techniques. Infertility became a "master status" for these women, undermining any other merits and achievements they might have. Most women fully internalized and endorsed the pronatalist discourse by way of pursuing long-term and burdensome infertility treatments, at any personal cost. The paper argues that resistance to stigma of infertility is only possible where women dare question the motherhood imperative, which is clearly not the case with most Israelis. Material and mental resources needed for resisting the stigma of infertility are found among few educated professional women. The paper suggests three theoretical inferences: (a) stigma as a psychological response is graded by the extent of individual's conformity with the dominant norms; (b) the stigma of childlessness is most devastating for the less educated women without career or other nonfamilial aspirations; and (c) in pronatalist societies, the coping and management approach to the study of infertility is more relevant than the resistance approach suggested by some authors.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=23044526700&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1023/a:1011084821700
DO - 10.1023/a:1011084821700
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AN - SCOPUS:23044526700
SN - 0360-0025
VL - 43
SP - 821
EP - 841
JO - Sex Roles
JF - Sex Roles
IS - 11-12
ER -