Hazardous Beginnings

Childbirth Practices in Frontier Tropical Australia

Authors

  • Kay Saunders University of Queensland
  • Katie Spearritt Monash University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600006401

Keywords:

Nineteenth century Eurocentricism, pro-natalist policies, infant and maternal mortality rates, childbirth

Abstract

Europeans living in the northern half of the Australian continent during the nineteenth century were united, and spurred on by, a dominant ideology of material progress, combined with a strong fear of being engulfed, both numerically and culturally, by foreign invaders. These bulwarks of Eurocentricism gave voice to strongly pro-natalist policies, coupled with intense immigration drives. The image of vast, uninhabited stretches of country waiting to be tamed by resolute, hard-working Britons added to the momentum for increased population. Progress, conceived in the masculinist framework of aggressive expansion, ruthless destruction of the Aboriginal people, economic development and environmental exploitation, needed not only capital, brawn and sheer determination to succeed but, also, healthy young citizens. Demographers graphs, however, fuelled anxiety that this dream might be undermined - for infant and maternal mortality rates in the tropics and sub-tropics were high compared with the rest of Australia and Britain. Masculinist attributes alone could not build the new society. Childbirth was potentially a hazardous and lethal undertaking which threatened to deprive the nascent colony of many fertile women and, in their demise, future generations.

Author Biographies

  • Kay Saunders, University of Queensland

    Kay Saunders is Associate Professor of History at the University of Queensland. She is author of several books in the areas of race and gender relations, including Race Relations in Colonial Queensland (co-author), Gender Relations in Australian History (co-editor), Australia's Frontline (co-author), Aboriginal Workers (co-editor), and has also published extensively on the social and political impact of the second world war. She is currently undertaking research on an annotated history offederation for the Federal Australia Consults program, 1996-8.

  • Katie Spearritt, Monash University

    Katie Spearritt is completing her doctorate at the National Key Centre in Industrial Relations at Monash University. She is author of articles on colonial women's history and feminist politics and has written for a range of industry publications.

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Published

1996-07-01

How to Cite

Saunders, K., & Spearritt, K. (1996). Hazardous Beginnings: Childbirth Practices in Frontier Tropical Australia. Queensland Review, 3(2), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600006401