Motherhood in Bondage: Foreword by Margaret Marsh

Motherhood in Bondage: Foreword by Margaret Marsh

Motherhood in Bondage: Foreword by Margaret Marsh

Motherhood in Bondage: Foreword by Margaret Marsh

Paperback(First Edition, New edition)

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Overview

Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) was a leading figure in the American birth control movement. Trained as a nurse, she moved to New York City to work among the poor. Having witnessed firsthand the travails of mothers in the city's poorest neighborhoods, she felt the need to provide them with information on reproduction and contraception. She abandoned her nursing career and devoted the rest of her life to disseminating information on women's reproduction and contraception, publishing books and articles and founding birth control clinics.

In Motherhood in Bondage, first published in 1928, Sanger reproduced letters written to her from women and sometimes men from all over the country, in both urban and rural areas, who were seeking advice on reproductive matters and marital relations, but mostly imploring her to help them find ways to avoid more pregnancies. The letters are grouped by theme into sixteen chapters, and Sanger wrote an introduction to each chapter. With clear relevance to the current post-Roe moment, these pleas to Sanger for advice on avoiding unwanted pregnancy dramatically detail the desperation for reproductive agency when birth control was unknown, withheld, or otherwise inaccessible.

In her foreword for this edition, Margaret Marsh describes the controversies surrounding these letters and places them in their historical context.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814250365
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 10/01/1999
Series: WOMEN & HEALTH C&S PERSPECTIVE
Edition description: First Edition, New edition
Pages: 446
Sales rank: 703,018
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 7.50(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Margaret Marsh is a historian who specializes in issues of gender. She has been chronicling the history of infertility, reproductive medicine and technology for three decades. With her sister, Wanda Ronner, she is the author of The Pursuit of Parenthood: From Test-Tube Babies to Uterus Transplants and two other books. Marsh is a professor of history at Rutgers University.

Table of Contents

xi. Foreword by Margaret Marsh
xliii. Chronology
xlv. Introduction by Margaret Sanger:  Explaining Source of Material, Significance, General Survey and Introduction, Calling Attention to Variety of Points Taken Up in Each Successive Chapter
I. Girl Mothers
II. The Pinch of Poverty
III. The Trap of Maternity
IV: The Struggle of the Unfit
V. “The Sins of the Fathers”
VI. Wasted Efforts
VII. Double Slavery
VIII. Voices of the Children
IX. The Two Generations
X. Solitary Confinement
XI. The Husband’s Own Story
XII. Marital Relations
XIII. Methods that Fail
XIV. Self-imposed Continence and Separation
XV. The Doctor Warns—but Does Not Tell
XVI. Desperate Remedies
XVII. Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness
XVIII. Conclusion
Appendix


 
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