Cindoglu, D.Cengiz, F. S.2016-02-082016-02-0820100739-9332http://hdl.handle.net/11693/22410In this article, we explore the increasing medicalization of birth and the surge in Caesarean sections in order to examine how this phenomenon relates to the dominant modernization discourse on women's lives in contemporary Turkey. We analyze women's modes of resistance and conformity to medicalization of birth through qualitative data from 15 focus groups of Turkish women as well as from physicians and midwives. We found out that Turkish women generally submit to medicalized birth, despite unpleasent experiences of hospital birth. We argue that the discourse of modernization and traditional patriarchy both play a role in women's submission to medicalization of birth; and we demonstrate the patterns through which these discourses collaborate in establishing the meaning of childbirth in Turkey. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.EnglishAttitude to healthAuthorityBehaviorBirthCesarean sectionCultural anthropologyEthnologyFemaleHealth personnel attitudeHospitalizationInformation processingLegal aspectMaleMedical staffNurse midwifePaternalismPregnancyPsychological aspectQualitative researchSocial changeTurkey (republic)Women's rightsAttitude of health personnelAttitude to healthAuthoritarianismFocus GroupsParturitionPower (Psychology)Western WorldMedicalization discourse and modernity: contested meanings over childbirth in contemporary TurkeyArticle10.1080/073993309030428311096-4665