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ANY FRIEND OF THE MOVEMENT: NETWORKING FOR BIRTH CONTROL 1920-1940
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Barnes and Noble
ANY FRIEND OF THE MOVEMENT: NETWORKING FOR BIRTH CONTROL 1920-1940
Current price: $33.95
Barnes and Noble
ANY FRIEND OF THE MOVEMENT: NETWORKING FOR BIRTH CONTROL 1920-1940
Current price: $33.95
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In the 1920s, a few Cleveland women perceived a need for reliable birth control. They believed that health and social service professionals denied women, especially poor and working-class women, critical health care information.
Any Friend of the Movement
tells the story of these women, their actions, and the organization they created-the direct forerunner of a modern Planned Parenthood affiliate. The disparate threads of this particular tale include the suicide of a pregnant woman, the gift of a bereaved inventor, smuggling contraceptive supplies across state lines, and sponsoring ice skating galas to fund the work.
breaks new ground in the history of birth control activism in North America. Meyer argues that private philanthropy and voluntary action on the part of clinics like the Maternal Health Association (MHA) and their clients vitalized the larger movement at its roots and pushed it forward. Meyer adds new voices to the history of the national birth control movement and its leaders. A cache of letters from clinic clients to the MHA offers an unusually intimate look at the personal side of this reform. Meyer uses other evidence, such as speeches, reports, founders' personal papers, newspaper accounts, and magazine and journal articles, and adds photo illustrations. Genuine concern for other women, eugenic and racist considerations, gender and class, networking, the prevailing cultural unease around sexual matters-these elements all shaped the MHA and, in doing so, shaped the larger struggle for reproductive rights.
Jimmy Elaine Wilkinson Meyer
is assistant editor of
Wooster,
the magazine for alumni and friends of the College of Wooster.
Any Friend of the Movement
tells the story of these women, their actions, and the organization they created-the direct forerunner of a modern Planned Parenthood affiliate. The disparate threads of this particular tale include the suicide of a pregnant woman, the gift of a bereaved inventor, smuggling contraceptive supplies across state lines, and sponsoring ice skating galas to fund the work.
breaks new ground in the history of birth control activism in North America. Meyer argues that private philanthropy and voluntary action on the part of clinics like the Maternal Health Association (MHA) and their clients vitalized the larger movement at its roots and pushed it forward. Meyer adds new voices to the history of the national birth control movement and its leaders. A cache of letters from clinic clients to the MHA offers an unusually intimate look at the personal side of this reform. Meyer uses other evidence, such as speeches, reports, founders' personal papers, newspaper accounts, and magazine and journal articles, and adds photo illustrations. Genuine concern for other women, eugenic and racist considerations, gender and class, networking, the prevailing cultural unease around sexual matters-these elements all shaped the MHA and, in doing so, shaped the larger struggle for reproductive rights.
Jimmy Elaine Wilkinson Meyer
is assistant editor of
Wooster,
the magazine for alumni and friends of the College of Wooster.