
Having had quite a number of C.Sections, we have NEVER had a Sectioned bitch who couldn't be persuaded to nurse their puppy/puppies. Even with singleton litters. As suggested, you need to get your bitch to lie down while talking gently with her, and latch the puppy/puppies on. With a full sized litter, just put one or two on at first - which obviously doesn't apply here.
I was lucky with a litter of 9 puppies I had. Having had a C.Section although she walked out of the vet's office, by the time we got home, barely 10 mins. later, she'd zonked out so I managed to carry her indoors (a dead weight!) and to the whelping box, switch on the brood lamp (this was 24 December with ice/snow on the ground) and go back to the car for the box with the puppies in. In the middle of all that, the agent who'd sold us the property (we moved in on Dec 6) arrived with a Christmas bottle. I'm afraid he got short shrift, poor man but I think he realised the situation - it was very much a farming area. Because mum was zonked out, I managed to latch on all the puppies, although has to be said, they'd been with her at the vet's office when I arrived - yoiks. My husband had to go to work for half a day, and wasn't there.
You might, and this is yuck, put some of her discharge on the puppy, which might help her to recognise that this strange creature belongs to her and allow instinct to kick in. If it's at all possible, the puppy needs mum's first milk to protect him through the first 5 weeks or so. So if it's at all possible to get her to allow him to nurse, do it. Don't leave her alone with the puppy until she has accepted him.