Abstract
Birthing is an exemplary setting for investigating how non-pathological painful sensations are intersubjectively established. Contractions are integral to giving birth and are physiologically normal events that can range from mild to intensely painful sensations. This conversation analytic study is the first to examine how first-stage labor contractions are made recognizable and shape interaction between laboring women, birth partners, and attending clinicians. Drawing on recordings from two British midwife-led units, we show how participants convey and recognize contraction pain through breathiness, pain cries, (limited) talk, and visible bodily actions. Contractions can be prospectively announced and/or retrospectively noticed. We demonstrate that breathing patterns become central to how participants collectively orient to and manage contractions, with the onset of pain temporarily suspending ongoing activities in favor of breath work. Data are in British English.
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CITATION STYLE
Jackson, C., Weatherall, A., & Land, V. (2025). Pain Displays in Childbirth: How First-Stage Contractions are Interactionally Managed in Midwife-Led Births. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 58(1), 50–68. https://doi.org/10.1080/08351813.2025.2450994
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