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Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft

Today, many pregnancy guides mention a nesting instinct. According to this, pregnant women would be seized by an urge to create the right environment for their child, for example to buy baby equipment or clean the apartment. The concept of the nesting instinct forms a specific configuration of knowl...

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Autor principal: Malich, Lisa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7790791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33259007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00048-020-00285-1
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author Malich, Lisa
author_facet Malich, Lisa
author_sort Malich, Lisa
collection PubMed
description Today, many pregnancy guides mention a nesting instinct. According to this, pregnant women would be seized by an urge to create the right environment for their child, for example to buy baby equipment or clean the apartment. The concept of the nesting instinct forms a specific configuration of knowledge: While it is widespread in the popular field, it occupies a marginal position in the scientific field. In this paper, I will investigate the historical epistemology of this form of knowledge. In so doing, the following questions are addressed: How did the knowledge about a nesting instinct during pregnancy form? How was the nest as a specific natural-anthropogenic environment constructed? And to what extent do notions of gender and environment interact here? To answer these questions, the study takes the perspective of a history of knowledge in transit, in the longue durée from the nineteenth century to the present. The investigation reveals a gradual feminization of the concept of environment in the knowledge of the nesting instinct. Whereas in the nineteenth century it was often considered a male behavioral pattern and the nest was an analogy to the house, in the first decades of the twentieth century, the instinct transformed into a primarily female characteristic, with the nest representing the interior of the home. A decisive condition for this circulation of knowledge was that the nest became a ‘metaphorical thing’. As such, the nest did not simply lead to naturalization, but denoted a natural-social in-between space that increasingly became the goal of female care work.
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spelling pubmed-77907912021-01-11 Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft Malich, Lisa NTM Artikel/Articles Today, many pregnancy guides mention a nesting instinct. According to this, pregnant women would be seized by an urge to create the right environment for their child, for example to buy baby equipment or clean the apartment. The concept of the nesting instinct forms a specific configuration of knowledge: While it is widespread in the popular field, it occupies a marginal position in the scientific field. In this paper, I will investigate the historical epistemology of this form of knowledge. In so doing, the following questions are addressed: How did the knowledge about a nesting instinct during pregnancy form? How was the nest as a specific natural-anthropogenic environment constructed? And to what extent do notions of gender and environment interact here? To answer these questions, the study takes the perspective of a history of knowledge in transit, in the longue durée from the nineteenth century to the present. The investigation reveals a gradual feminization of the concept of environment in the knowledge of the nesting instinct. Whereas in the nineteenth century it was often considered a male behavioral pattern and the nest was an analogy to the house, in the first decades of the twentieth century, the instinct transformed into a primarily female characteristic, with the nest representing the interior of the home. A decisive condition for this circulation of knowledge was that the nest became a ‘metaphorical thing’. As such, the nest did not simply lead to naturalization, but denoted a natural-social in-between space that increasingly became the goal of female care work. Springer International Publishing 2020-12-01 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC7790791/ /pubmed/33259007 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00048-020-00285-1 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open Access Dieser Artikel wird unter der Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Lizenz veröffentlicht, welche die Nutzung, Vervielfältigung, Bearbeitung, Verbreitung und Wiedergabe in jeglichem Medium und Format erlaubt, sofern Sie den/die ursprünglichen Autor(en) und die Quelle ordnungsgemäß nennen, einen Link zur Creative Commons Lizenz beifügen und angeben, ob Änderungen vorgenommen wurden. Die in diesem Artikel enthaltenen Bilder und sonstiges Drittmaterial unterliegen ebenfalls der genannten Creative Commons Lizenz, sofern sich aus der Abbildungslegende nichts anderes ergibt. Sofern das betreffende Material nicht unter der genannten Creative Commons Lizenz steht und die betreffende Handlung nicht nach gesetzlichen Vorschriften erlaubt ist, ist für die oben aufgeführten Weiterverwendungen des Materials die Einwilligung des jeweiligen Rechteinhabers einzuholen. Weitere Details zur Lizenz entnehmen Sie bitte der Lizenzinformation auf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.de.
spellingShingle Artikel/Articles
Malich, Lisa
Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title_full Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title_fullStr Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title_full_unstemmed Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title_short Das Nest als Umwelt. Eine historische Epistemologie des Nestbauinstinkts in der Schwangerschaft
title_sort das nest als umwelt. eine historische epistemologie des nestbauinstinkts in der schwangerschaft
topic Artikel/Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7790791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33259007
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00048-020-00285-1
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