Browsing by Subject "Maternal"
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Item Feminine Allegiance and Fidelity in Joseph Conrad’s The Secret Agent(Department of English, 2022) Thapa, ParbatiThis study analyzes Joseph Conrad’s novel The Secret Agent from the feminist point of view. Women serve family and society by even sacrificing their personal ambitions and resources. The research explores the reasons behind the valorization of a female character, Mrs. Winnie Verloc, who persevere the human values through her character; feminine allegiance and fidelity. Conrad’s main motive is to represent the genuine level of allegiance and fidelity of a woman to protect family values and familial bonding. Nancy Chodorow’s ideas have been taken as methodological tool to interpret. She proposes that it is a woman’s mothering process that gives way to a gendered identity. Additionally she puts forward the ideas that a mother is naturally able to relate to her daughter, and this bond or connection between mother and daughter helps in the development of the feminine identity is clearly portrays in the novel. The research finds that it is essential to preserve feminine fidelity and allegiance in order to uphold family peace and social solidarity in every human society. The project argues that Conrad’s this novel has contributed on representation of patriarchal oppression in British society through the diverse and extreme level of suffering faced by women character. Women characters in the novel are dramatized in stereotypical, traditional and pathetic way. But Conrad’s main motive is to represent the extreme level of patriarchal domination and insensitive patriarchy through women’s suffering which operated in the British society.Item Maternal and Child Health in Mushahar Community in Triyuga Municipality-7,Motigada,Udayapur(Department of sociology, 2020) Shasankar, ChandaNot availableItem A Study on Maternal and Child Health Care Practices of Dhupoo VDC, Shankhuwa Sava District(Faculty of Education, 2011) Panta, Raj KumarThe study, “Maternal and Child Health Care Practices: A Study below of 5 years child in Dhupoo VDC, Shankhuwa Sava District" has been carried out to assess the health care practices of a rural area of Nepal. It tries to find out the socioeconomic and demographic characteristics; to assess the antenatal care, delivery and postnatal care practices; and to examine the practice of colostrums feeding, breastfeeding, child immunization, and additional food feeding by rural women. A total of 120 respondent mothers were interviewed on maternal and child health care, and 36 respondents were taken for focus group discussion. For key informant interview, the chairperson of health post, volunteers, social worker, TBA, etc., were consulted. Therefore population of study area is 120. In the study area, ages of the respondents are between 15-45 years. Among them, 29.16(35) percent women were married at early age (15-20 years), and literacy rate of the women has been found satisfactory. 75% respondents are landless and most of the respondents are housewives. Regarding health care practices, around 90 percent of the respondents were found that they go for health checkup during pregnancy, and 56.86% of the total mothers have taken more than two doses of TT injection during their pregnancy period. The study has confirmed that around 68.33% of the mothers delivered their babies in hospital and 31.67% mothers delivered at their own homes. All of the respondents had fed colostrums and 73.34% respondents have breastfed for more than two years. Overall, although the findings suggest that these practices are satisfactory from a national level point of view, their performance can be said below par if we compare it to other villages. Women's social status, unavailability of infrastructure, weak awareness's transmission along with their low economic and political status as well as their occupations is seen to be responsible for their somewhat low performance on maternal and child health care