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The Moral Property of Women: A History of Birth Control Politics in America
 
 
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The Moral Property of Women: A History of Birth Control Politics in America [Paperback]

Linda Gordon (Author)

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Book Description

0252074599 978-0252074592 March 12, 2007
Choice Magazine's Outstanding Academic Books for 2004 The only book to cover the entire history of birth control and the intense controversies about reproduction rights that have raged in the United States for more than 150 years, The Moral Property of Women is a thoroughly updated and revised version of the award-winning historian Linda Gordon's classic history Woman's Body, Woman's Right, originally published in 1976.

Arguing that reproduction control has always been central to women's status, The Moral Property of Women shows how opposition to it has long been part of the conservative opposition to gender equality. From its roots in folk medicine and in a campaign so broad it constituted a grassroots social movement at some points in history, to its legitimization through public policy, the widespread acceptance of birth control has involved a major reorientation of sexual values.

Gordon puts today's reproduction control controversies--foreign aid for family planning, the abortion debates, teenage pregnancy and childbearing, stem-cell research--into historical perspective and shows how the campaign to legalize abortion is part of a 150-year-old struggle over reproductive rights, a struggle that has followed a circuitous path. Beginning with the "folk medicine" of birth control, Gordon discusses how the backlash against the first women's rights movement of the 1800s prohibited both abortion and contraception about 130 years ago. She traces the campaign for legal reproduction control from the 1870s to the present and argues that attitudes toward birth control have been inseparable from family values, especially standards about sexuality and gender equality.

Highlighting both leaders and followers in the struggle, The Moral Property of Women chronicles the contributions of well-known reproduction control pioneers such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Margaret Sanger, and Emma Goldman, as well as lesser- known campaigners including the utopian socialist Robert Dale Owen, the three doctors Foote--Edward Bliss Foote, Edward Bond Foote, and Mary Bond Foote--the civil libertarian Mary Ware Dennett, and the daring Jane project of the 1970s, in which Chicago women's liberation activists performed illegal abortions.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for earlier editions: 
"A major contribution to the history that feminists must know if we are not to repeat it." -- Adrienne Rich



Praise for earlier editions: 
"[Gordon's] analyses are novel, insightful, and provocative." -- Choice

About the Author

Linda Gordon, a professor of history at New York University, is the author of numerous books, including Pitied but Not Entitled: Single Mothers and the History of Welfare, 1890-1935, and The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction, which won the Bancroft Prize and the Beveridge Prize.

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More About the Author

Linda Gordon is the Florence Kelley Professor of History at New York University. She is the author of numerous books including Dorothea Lange and Impounded, and won the Bancroft Prize for The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction. She lives in New York.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Although birth control is very old, the movement for the right to control reproduction is young. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
seventy birth control clinics, voluntary motherhood advocates, social purity advocates, birth controllers, birth control organizations, many eugenists, population control establishment, eugenic logic, birth control cause, reproduction control, birth control conference, popular health movement, prosperous women, birth control propaganda, sex radicalism, birth control movement, birth control ideas, birth control league, birth control politics, antiabortion advocates, birth control groups, population controllers, sterilization abuse, male continence, birth control services
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York City, Margaret Sanger, Puerto Rico, New Deal, Puerto Rican, American Birth Control League, African American, Dale Owen, Birth Control Review, Catholic Church, Clinical Research Bureau, Emma Goldman, Population Council, The Woman Rebel, Supreme Court, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, New England, New Right, Madame Restell, New Jersey, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Our Bodies, Post Office, Third World, Antoinette Konikow
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