Liquid Gold Or Russian Roulette? Risk And Human Milk Sharing In The Us News Media

Keywords

breastfeeding; intensive mothering; milk banks; milk sharing; risk

Abstract

The exchange of human breast milk, a common and well-established practice, has become a site of public controversy in the US. There is controversy over the use of the internet to facilitate milk exchange and public interest in the practice has been stimulated by a research article published in the journal Pediatrics that identified high levels of potentially harmful bacteria in breast milk sold online. In this article we use feminist critical discourse analysis to critically examine how breast milk sharing is represented in a sample of 30 articles from US print newspapers published in 2010–2013. We found complex and contradictory images of human milk, with medically supervised milk banks represented as a life-saving entity, nature’s ‘liquid gold’, whereas peer sharing of breast milk was represented as dangerous, and in this context breast milk was represented as a potentially life-threatening substance. Women who donated milk to milk banks were represented as altruistic and those who obtained their babies’ milk from the milk bank were represented as responsible and acting in the best interests of their babies. In contrast women who participated in peer milk sharing were represented at best as ill-informed about the risks to babies and at worst, morally reprehensible for disregarding the risks. Mothers who fed their babies this milk were represented as irresponsible and playing ‘Russian roulette’ with their babies. We argue that such contradictory representations are grounded in concerns in high income countries such as the USA with the control and surveillance of the female body through discourses of risk and are based on cultural constructions of individualism and intensive mothering.

Publication Date

1-2-2015

Publication Title

Health, Risk and Society

Volume

17

Issue

1

Number of Pages

30-45

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1080/13698575.2014.1000269

Socpus ID

84923642351 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84923642351

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