Description
Book SynopsisBy examining the history of menopause over the course of the twentieth century, Houck shows how the experience and representation of menopause has been profoundly influenced by biomedical developments and by changing roles for women and the changing definition of womanhood.
Trade ReviewHouck…has researched menopausal sentiments expressed by doctors, the popular press and women themselves, from the late-19th century to the present… Much of the information she’s unearthed is both horrifying and fascinating. -- Michele Kort * Ms. *
All in all,
Hot and Bothered is more than an historical narration of culturally driven gender representation. If it receives the readership it deserves it will help women become—more genuinely—themselves. -- Jill MacKay Scot * PsycCRITIQUES *
Houck takes white, middle-class women’s experiences and the complexity of medicine seriously. Activists will find her historical analysis provocative and scholars will be particularly interested in the sources she has identified and examined. Houck’s view of menopause certainly complicates both medical and feminist history, proof that this story from the past can still generate heat. -- Susan E. Bell * Women’s Review of Books *
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Hot and Bothered] examines how, within each epoch, new meanings of menopause emerged when biotechnological developments intersected with changes in the social and cultural landscapes of women’s lives. Houck mines the medical, academic, popular, and self-help literature of each era to support an argument that aging women and menopause have figured prominently in society’s angst about the nature of womanhood, the roles of women, and the practice of medicine. This examination of how feminism, women’s agency, social constructionism, and medicalization intersect in menopause is a helpful addition to the women’s health scholarship. -- P. Lefler * Choice *
Judith Houck has produced a highly nuanced account of the social construction of menopause and the politics of the doctor–patient relationship. Carefully tracing the transformation of menopause from an emblem of womanhood’s frailty to a symbol of women’s increasing power in the medical marketplace, she shows that no single explanatory model—neither medicalization, fears of the aging process, nor pharmaceutical victimization—alone explains American women’s current dilemma over the appropriateness of hormone replacement therapy. -- Ellen S. More, author of
Restoring the Balance: Women Physicians and the Profession of Medicine, 1850–1995A fascinating book. Judith Houck tracks the representations of menopause—from liberation to castration—and shows how the bodies of aging women have been used for a variety of projects across the political spectrum. At the same time, she shows that women’s self-perceptions differed from what advisers and advertisers taught. Students of the pharmaceutical industry, bodies, sexualities, family, and medicine will all want to read Houck’s excellent book. -- Leslie J. Reagan, Professor of History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Drawing on medical literature, the popular press, and women’s accounts from the 1890s to the 1980s, this beautifully written book examines menopause as both cultural construct and physiological transition. Judith Houck provides a nuanced discussion of menopause in relation to medical theory, clinical practice, women’s demands, and husbands’ responses. She shows that women were not victims of the medical profession but acted in ways they thought to be in their interests. In turn, women’s own sense of their menopausal experience mattered in doctors’ responses, shaping medical diagnosis and treatment.
Hot and Bothered makes an important contribution to women’s history, medical history, the history of the body, and the history of aging. -- Susan L. Smith, Associate Professor of History, University of Alberta, and author of
Japanese American Midwives: Culture, Community, and Health Politics, 1880–1950Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. "Hold Oneself Well in Hand": Medicine, Menopause, and the New Woman 2. "Endocrine Perverts" and "Derailed Menopausics": Gender Transgressions and Mental Disorders, 1897-1937 3. "Consider the Patent as a Woman and Not a Groups of Gland": Women, Menopause, and the Medical Encounter, 1938-1962 4. Domesticity and Liberation: Menopause in the Popular Literature, 1938-1962 5. "Casting an Evil Spell over Her Once Happy Home": Menopause as a Family Disease, 1938-1962 6. "Why All the Fuss?" Middle-Class Women and the Denial of the Menopausal Body, 1938-1962 7. Feminine Forever: Robert A. Wilson and the Hormonal Revolution, 1963-1980 8. "At the Will and Whim of My Hormones": Women, Menopause, and the Hormonal Imperative 9. "What Do These Women Want?" Feminist Responses to Feminine Forever Epilogue. Aging Supermodels and Inner Crones: Menopause at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century Notes Index