Sufficient Scruples

Bioethics, healthcare policy, and related issues.

June 1, 2007

Abortion: History and Attitudes over Time

by @ 5:00 pm. Filed under General, Autonomy, Provider Roles, Personhood, Women's Issues, Access to Healthcare, Reproductive Ethics, Sex, Child-Rearing, Biotechnology, Global/Community Health, Healthcare Politics, BioFlix, BioLibri

Making with the sorely overdue link-love: two months ago, Amanda Marcotte (of Pandagon, and the best thing that ever happened to John Edwards) linked my prior post on right-wing propaganda about Margaret Sanger (as a way of attacking Planned Parenthood). She points out the fact that, in Sanger’s day, PP was actually anti-abortion (largely for reasons of the relative safety of the procedure, much lower then than now), and that the wingers seem to have no conception of the irony of their slanders.

The article generated a fascinating discussion thread, however (with minimal, but nonzero, trollage) - one that I only stumbled across today by following a visitor link (thanks!). I’m sorry to be so late on this but I encourage everyone to run over there; the discussion is interesting and, collectively, it includes a fascinating list of resources on the history of abortion, abortion and race, and sexual autonomy as seen from a variety of times and places, and presented in a variety of media (the rock-opera version of a 19th-century German play about the link between lack of sex ed and unplanned pregnancy sounds . . . wild - and I had no idea there was a whole list of early silent movies on the same topic!). Now I’ve got a lot more reading to do! So do you.

About:

Search
Sufficient Scruples:

Categories:

Archives:

June 2007
M T W T F S S
« May   Jul »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  

Other:

Powered by WordPress

Get Firefox!

Ask the Ethicist!

Podcasts:

White Papers:

Bioethics Links:

Blogroll: