4.2 Article

Music to My Ears: A Material-semiotic Analysis of Fetal Heart Sounds in Midwifery Prenatal Care

Journal

SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY & HUMAN VALUES
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 517-543

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01622439211005176

Keywords

midwifery; pregnancy; fetal monitoring; aesthetics; sound

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This study examines the aesthetic dimensions of obstetrical surveillance practices through the lens of music in midwifery prenatal care. By comparing different orchestrations, it highlights the ways in which fetal heartbeat monitoring shapes relationships between fetuses and pregnant women in unique ways.
Unlike sonographic examinations, sonic fetal heartbeat monitoring has received relatively little attention from scholars in the social sciences. Using the case of fetal heartbeat monitoring as part of midwifery prenatal care in Germany, this contribution introduces music as an analytical tool for exploring the aesthetic dimensions of obstetrical surveillance practices. Based on ethnographic stories, three orchestrations are compared in which three different instruments help audiences to listen to what becomes fetal heartbeat music and to qualify fetal and pregnant lives in relation to each other. In the Doppler-based orchestration, audible heartbeat music is taken as a sign of a child in need of parental love and care cultivated to listen. The Pinard horn makes esoteric fetal music that can be appreciated by the midwife as a skilled instrumentalist alone and helps to enact a child hidden in the belly. The cardiotocograph brings about soothing music and a reassuring relationship with a child but also durable scripts of juridical beauty. This material-semiotic analysis amplifies how well-being is shaped in midwifery prenatal care practices.

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