Early modern interest in conception, pregnancy and labour extended far beyond medical specialists: Audrey Eccles’ study of the literature in the period 1540–1740 shows that ‘The public was evidently fascinated by the subject’. Lisa Forman Cody continues the story through the eighteenth century, noting that ‘tales of the body and birth, both normal and strange’ are plentiful ‘across genres, disciplines and locations’. Discourses associated with various professions interacted vigorously in discussions of two controversial issues: the child's inheritance from mother and father at conception, and the power of the mother's imagination to affect the child in her womb. Matters became even more heated when pregnancy reached its end: not only were there interdisciplinary debates about the best means of bringing the mother's labour to a successful conclusion, and how much of the work was being done by the baby, but the pressure of changing practices upon professional boundaries occasioned complex negotiations, and sometimes fierce rivalries, between physicians, apothecaries, surgeons, and midwives both male and female. Furthermore, in the competitive atmosphere of the period, some practitioners felt it necessary to conceal their most effectual equipment, and occasionally incurred reproaches, not for being unprofessional, since the word was not yet being used in an appropriate sense, but for failing to be proper gentlemen, which meant much the same thing. Meanwhile, the whole area was patrolled by poets, novelists and satirists, whose response illuminated ethical and emotional concerns, some of which are still relevant to the place of science within society. In the course of these conflicts, female reproductive bodies, human and animal, were not only objects of professional attention but also the means of interrogating concepts and practices central to everything we define as ‘professional’ today.
Was the female body really reproductive, or just a production line for items of exclusively male manufacture? For those who enjoyed the benefits of a classical education, there were different options. In the Generation of Animals, Aristotle asserts that the male provides seed, the female only a growth medium and a site for its development. The idea that both sexes contribute seed to the child appears in the corpus of works ascribed to Hippocrates. It was later elaborated by Galen. Yet the two-seed theory failed to value both parents’ contributions equally.