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Who are 'we' to speak of benefits and harms? and to whom do we speak? A (sympathetic) response to Woollard on breast feeding and language

Who are 'we' to speak of benefits and harms? and to whom do we speak? A (sympathetic) response to Woollard on breast feeding and language
Who are 'we' to speak of benefits and harms? and to whom do we speak? A (sympathetic) response to Woollard on breast feeding and language
In a recent article, Fiona Woollard draws attention to a number of problems, both theoretical and pragmatic, with current discourse around infant feeding. References both to the ‘benefits of breastfeeding’ and ‘harms of formula’ are problematic, since there is no obvious baseline of comparison against which to make these evaluations. Further, she highlights the pragmatic consequences of these linguistic choices. Saying that formula feeding harms babies, for instance, is likely to exacerbate feelings of guilt and shame felt by many mothers who use formula, for various reasons. Since I agree with much that Woollard says, this response is mostly sympathetic, but I wish to draw attention to one point that is largely missing from her analysis. The pragmatic effect of an utterance depends significantly on who is speaking, to whom, and in what context. Thus, we might differentiate between what it is appropriate to say in a professional context, such as an academic journal, from what one might say in a policy document or to a new mother. While we should always be careful about the language that we use, we need not assume that the same language is appropriate in all contexts nor that equal care is always required.
newborns and minors, public health ethics, women
1473-4257
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d

Saunders, Ben (2018) Who are 'we' to speak of benefits and harms? and to whom do we speak? A (sympathetic) response to Woollard on breast feeding and language. Journal of Medical Ethics. (doi:10.1136/medethics-2018-105122).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In a recent article, Fiona Woollard draws attention to a number of problems, both theoretical and pragmatic, with current discourse around infant feeding. References both to the ‘benefits of breastfeeding’ and ‘harms of formula’ are problematic, since there is no obvious baseline of comparison against which to make these evaluations. Further, she highlights the pragmatic consequences of these linguistic choices. Saying that formula feeding harms babies, for instance, is likely to exacerbate feelings of guilt and shame felt by many mothers who use formula, for various reasons. Since I agree with much that Woollard says, this response is mostly sympathetic, but I wish to draw attention to one point that is largely missing from her analysis. The pragmatic effect of an utterance depends significantly on who is speaking, to whom, and in what context. Thus, we might differentiate between what it is appropriate to say in a professional context, such as an academic journal, from what one might say in a policy document or to a new mother. While we should always be careful about the language that we use, we need not assume that the same language is appropriate in all contexts nor that equal care is always required.

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Speaking of benefits clean - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 September 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 October 2018
Keywords: newborns and minors, public health ethics, women

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 423567
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/423567
ISSN: 1473-4257
PURE UUID: 4989efde-e4e7-4969-9bc1-180a44541d00
ORCID for Ben Saunders: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5147-6397

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Date deposited: 26 Sep 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:19

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