“Do you know what you’re having?”
Yes, I was having a baby. And I didn’t want to know if it was a boy or a girl.
It’s the ultimate modern-day pregnancy dilemma – finding out the sex of an unborn baby – and it’s heating up again.
Novelist, Ian McEwan, 65 – who wrote Atonement and The Cement Garden – has angered some after saying he thinks parents shouldn’t find out the sex of their child before it’s born.
McEwan’s comments were made in response to a question about how he figures out if a character will be male or female.
“It is above all a person. Knowing in advance this social identity which confers a pink and blue fate almost seems like a form of moral kitsch, because what you are celebrating is a person. So I rather take the same view of my characters, if it falls out it is a woman or a man then I go that way,” he said.
“It is always a great gulf that separates us … I would like to think that [for the novelist] it is a free and open field.”
McEwan’s comments have caused one UK mother to speak out. Tanith Carey wrote an article for the Daily Mail stating that knowing the sex of her both her babies before they were born helped her to adjust.
“The ‘is it a boy?’ slash ’is it a girl?’ moment may also make for great drama on Downtown Abbey. But after 26 hours in labour, ending in an emergency C-section, giving birth to my older daughter, Lily, the last thing I needed as any more cliff-hangers,” Carey wrote.