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This study examines how U.S. women who learn the sex of their fetus before birth are engaging in gendered verbal interactions throughout pregnancy. These include types of conversations, usage of gendered pronouns, and calling the unborn baby by a given name. These changes in behaviors by pregnant woman once fetal sex is known can be seen as a form of anticipatory socialization, as they begin to practice the behaviors and values associated with the role of being either a mother of a son or mother of a daughter. Findings also discuss general differences between mothers who choose to find out fetal sex and those who choose not to.

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This page is a summary of: Anticipatory Socialization of Pregnant Women, Sociological Perspectives, December 2014, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0731121414564883.
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