Nishizaka2020b

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Nishizaka2020b
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Nishizaka2020b
Author(s) Aug Nishizaka
Title Guided touch: The sequential organization of feeling a fetus in Japanese midwifery practices
Editor(s) Asta Cekaite, Lorenza Mondada
Tag(s) EMCA, Touch, Social interaction
Publisher Routledge
Year 2020
Language English
City London
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 224-248
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9781003026631-10
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Touch in Social Interaction: Touch, Language, and Body
Chapter

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Abstract

In this chapter, I address a distinctive phenomenon observable in Japanese midwifery practices. Midwives sometimes guide a pregnant woman’s hands around her abdomen so that she, the pregnant woman, can feel a fetal body part. This guided touch is organized as specifically accountable and achieved as a process. The process is projectively organized and variously expandable. When the midwife cannot feel the target object via the pregnant woman’s hands that she touches, the current sequence may be expanded before the guided touch is adequately provided. When the midwife can feel the target object via the pregnant woman’s hands, but the pregnant woman may not discriminate it adequately, the sequence may be expanded after the pregnant woman acknowledges the midwife’s pointing out of the object. In conclusion, I discuss some consequences that the foregoing analyses have for interaction studies of perception and women’s medicine.

Notes