This article presents an analysis of popular UK-based guides to pregnancy.
A discursive approach is adopted to explicate the interpretative repertoire
s used to construct pregnancy. 'Planning for pregnancy' incites women to en
gage in self-disciplining practices relating to the (pre)pregnant body, the
self and 'transforming the environment'. The easy combination and repeated
use of these practices in conjunction with a repertoire of 'pregnancy as r
isk' serves to mask diversity and to decontextualize and individualize preg
nancy to vender it separate from women's other relationships identities and
knowledges, with little regard for the specific circumstances in which wom
en become/are pregnant. Medicalized discourses position women with limited
agency, while, by means of repertoires of 'choice' informed by 'woman-centr
ed' discourses, women are construed as consumers, taking responsibility for
themselves and their babies. A tension is manifest in that the responsibil
ity and blame for 'abnormality' or 'unsuccessful' outcomes is located with
individual women/parents. We argue that through both medicalized and 'woman
-centred' discourses, reproduction remains a key site for the regulation of
women.