listlessness makes her ill. When Emma becomes pregnant, Charles decides to move to a different town in hopes of reviving her health. In the new town of Yonville, the Bovarys meet Homais, the town pharmacist, a pompous windbag who loves to hear himself speak. Emma also meets Leon, a law clerk, who, like her, is bored with rural life and loves to escape through romantic novels. When Emma gives birth to her daughter Berthe, motherhood disappoints her--she had desired a son--and she continues to be despondent. Romantic feelings blossom between Emma and Leon. However, when Emma realizes that Leon loves her, she feels guilty and throws herself into the role of a dutiful wife. Leon grows tired of waiting and, believing that he can never possess Emma, departs to study law in Paris. His departure makes Emma miserable. Soon, at an agricultural fair, a wealthy neighbor named Rodolphe, who is attracted by Emma's beauty,
in the woman'sbody · The explanation lies not so much in magic or medicine but social structure: Ndembu are matrilineal and virilocal · The tensions are built into the social fabric: Conflicting loyalties, allegiances mark the fault lines · Failure to conceive draws attention to the major sourceof tension within society and an opportunity to work through the social structural tensions Changing Face of Relationships? · Childlessness or "infertility" a `norm violation'? · Normative Motherhood, Prescriptive Fatherhood? · Is heteronormative marriage on the decline? · Conjugal bond weakening and Cohabitation of the rise? Do men and women react differently to childlessness? · "Status-passage" · Threat to a couple's shared re a l i t i e s n e c e s s i t a t i n g construction of new shared realities
Maternity & Women's Health Care. Seventh edition. Mosby, Inc. May, K.A., Mahlmeister, L.R. 1990. Comprehensive Maternity Nursing. Nursing Process and the Childbearing Family. Philadelphia: J.B.Lippincott Company, 1253 lk. Nordic Council. Nordic Nutrition Recommendations 2004. Nord 2004:13. Olds, S.B, London M.L. Ladewig, P.W 1992. Maternal Newborn Nursing A family Centered approach. Addison-Wesley Nursing. 1225 lk. Olson, C.M. (2005). Tracking of Food Choices across the transition to Motherhood. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, Vol, 37 No 3 Parm, Ü., Parv,V. 2006. Nakkushaigused ja epidemioloogia. Härmametsa Talu kirjastus Pilliter, A. 1995. Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing family. Philadelphia: J.B.Lipincott Company. 1895 lk. Prue, C. (2005).Frequently asked Questions about Pregnancy and a Healthy Diet. Pregnancy and a Healthy Diet, 28 Riordan, J
Battlefield promotions and knighthood are ways of recognizing that heroes have passed an ordeal and entered a smaller group of special survivors. Joseph Camp bell's overall name for what we are calling Act Two is "Initiation," a new beginning in a new rank. T h e hero after facing death is really a new creature. A woman who has gone through the life-threatening territory of childbirth belongs to a different order of being. She has been initiated into the company of motherhood, a select sorority. Initiation into secret societies, sororities, or fraternities means that you are privy to certain secrets and sworn never to reveal them. You pass tests to prove your worthiness. You may be put through a ritual death-and-rebirth Ordeal and may be given a new name and rank to signify you are a newborn being. N E W PERCEPTIONS Heroes may find that surviving death grants new powers or better perceptions. In
Even at state and local levels, a sim- ilar game is played. Take as evidence the comment of a Los Angeles woman I heard expressing her conflicting feelings over a California referendum to limit smoking in public places. "It's a real tough decision. They've got big stars speaking for it, and big stars speaking against it. You don't know how to vote." Does the Name Pavlov Ring a Bell? While politicians have long strained to associate themselves with the values of motherhood, country, and apple pie, it may be in the last of these connections- 7The rights to such associations do not come cheaply. Corporate contributors spend millions to win sponsorships for the Olympics. But this amount pales in comparison to the many millions more these companies then spend to advertise their connection to the event. Yet it may be that the largest dol- lar figure of all for the corporate sponsors is the one on the profit line. A survey by Advertising Age