Description

Book Synopsis
Contrasting the birthing practices of upper-class and indigenous women, this ethnography of the alternative birth movement in Mexico offers new understandings of female empowerment, citizenship, and the commodification of indigenous culture.

Trade Review
Vega walks the reader through more than two years of ethnographic work…She is attentive to her own origins as a relatively well-resourced American academic in relation to the communities she studies, exercising a 'hyper-self-reflexivity' to understand the ways in which even subtle differences in appearance, language, and consumption patterns impact social inclusion. * CHOICE *
[No Alternative] is a good examination of the other side of humanized birth…this book has many strengths, including its theoretical sophistication and the very important way that Vega reimagines alternative birth and its effect on different bodies and populations. Anyone interested in matters of anthropology of reproduction, race and citizenship, and Mexico would benefit from reading Vega's No Alternative. * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
No Alternative is a deeply theoretical and richly ethnographic critique of the relationship between traditional midwifery and the humanized birth movement in Mexico…Vega adds important provocations and depth to scholarly and activist conversations about power in health care in general, and about the intersecting forces that direct flows of knowledge and authority in the field of childbirth in particular. * Medical Anthropology Quarterly *
No Alternative offers a sharp and reflexive analysis of contemporary midwifery practices in Mexico…Vega's narrative style is simultaneously sharp and smooth, making reading resemble the experience of watching a detective movie. She takes the reader from one ethnographic site to the next as if they had been seamlessly lived...This strategy gives fluidity to the narrative while also endowing force and clarity to her arguments. * Reproductive BioMedicine and Society Online *
No Alternative demonstrates that the study of childbirth is a lens through which one can unearth social realities and analyse the dynamics of inequities under the guise of postmodern, well-intentioned liberation movements…This project accomplishes its goals of demonstrating how women's bodies and their reproductive options (or lack thereof) are sites where race, class and gender are created and transnational economies play out. It makes crucial intellectual interventions in the evolving fields of medical anthropology and transnational feminist studies. * Journal of Latin American Studies *
[No Alternative] should be of interest to sociologists teaching classes on reproduction, medical sociology, development, and global and transnational processes. * American Journal of Sociology *
[Vega] offers an insightful analysis of the political economy of midwifery networks in Mexico...With precise, careful analysis of newly popularized 'traditional' childbirth practices, Vega illuminates how the celebrated promise of midwifery reifies existing disparities that are derived from an imbrication of colonial legacies and neoliberal market logics... Vega’s exciting field site and her astute scholarship...turns most of the basic premises of the anthropology of reproduction on its head. This is a welcome addition to the recently flourishing critical scholarship on race and reproduction. * Anthropological Quarterly *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction
1. Commodifying Indigeneity: Politics of Representation
2. Humanized Birth: Unforeseen Politics of Parenting
3. Intersectionality: A Contextual and Dialogical Framework
4. A Cartography of “Race” and Obstetric Violence
5. (Ethno)Medical (Im)Mobilities
Conclusion: Destination Birth—Time and Space Travel

Notes
Bibliography
Index

No Alternative

    Product form

    £21.59

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £23.99 – you save £2.40 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 29 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Rosalynn A. Vega

    3 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of No Alternative by Rosalynn A. Vega

      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 14/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9781477316771, 978-1477316771
      ISBN10: 1477316779

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Contrasting the birthing practices of upper-class and indigenous women, this ethnography of the alternative birth movement in Mexico offers new understandings of female empowerment, citizenship, and the commodification of indigenous culture.

      Trade Review
      Vega walks the reader through more than two years of ethnographic work…She is attentive to her own origins as a relatively well-resourced American academic in relation to the communities she studies, exercising a 'hyper-self-reflexivity' to understand the ways in which even subtle differences in appearance, language, and consumption patterns impact social inclusion. * CHOICE *
      [No Alternative] is a good examination of the other side of humanized birth…this book has many strengths, including its theoretical sophistication and the very important way that Vega reimagines alternative birth and its effect on different bodies and populations. Anyone interested in matters of anthropology of reproduction, race and citizenship, and Mexico would benefit from reading Vega's No Alternative. * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
      No Alternative is a deeply theoretical and richly ethnographic critique of the relationship between traditional midwifery and the humanized birth movement in Mexico…Vega adds important provocations and depth to scholarly and activist conversations about power in health care in general, and about the intersecting forces that direct flows of knowledge and authority in the field of childbirth in particular. * Medical Anthropology Quarterly *
      No Alternative offers a sharp and reflexive analysis of contemporary midwifery practices in Mexico…Vega's narrative style is simultaneously sharp and smooth, making reading resemble the experience of watching a detective movie. She takes the reader from one ethnographic site to the next as if they had been seamlessly lived...This strategy gives fluidity to the narrative while also endowing force and clarity to her arguments. * Reproductive BioMedicine and Society Online *
      No Alternative demonstrates that the study of childbirth is a lens through which one can unearth social realities and analyse the dynamics of inequities under the guise of postmodern, well-intentioned liberation movements…This project accomplishes its goals of demonstrating how women's bodies and their reproductive options (or lack thereof) are sites where race, class and gender are created and transnational economies play out. It makes crucial intellectual interventions in the evolving fields of medical anthropology and transnational feminist studies. * Journal of Latin American Studies *
      [No Alternative] should be of interest to sociologists teaching classes on reproduction, medical sociology, development, and global and transnational processes. * American Journal of Sociology *
      [Vega] offers an insightful analysis of the political economy of midwifery networks in Mexico...With precise, careful analysis of newly popularized 'traditional' childbirth practices, Vega illuminates how the celebrated promise of midwifery reifies existing disparities that are derived from an imbrication of colonial legacies and neoliberal market logics... Vega’s exciting field site and her astute scholarship...turns most of the basic premises of the anthropology of reproduction on its head. This is a welcome addition to the recently flourishing critical scholarship on race and reproduction. * Anthropological Quarterly *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments

      Introduction
      1. Commodifying Indigeneity: Politics of Representation
      2. Humanized Birth: Unforeseen Politics of Parenting
      3. Intersectionality: A Contextual and Dialogical Framework
      4. A Cartography of “Race” and Obstetric Violence
      5. (Ethno)Medical (Im)Mobilities
      Conclusion: Destination Birth—Time and Space Travel

      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account