More Than Medicine. Jennifer Nelson
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More Than Medicine
A History of the Feminist Women’s Health Movement
Jennifer Nelson
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
www.nyupress.org
© 2015 by New York University
All rights reserved
References to Internet websites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. Neither the author nor New York University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Nelson, Jennifer, 1967– , author.
More than medicine: a history of the feminist women’s health movement / Jennifer Nelson.
p. ; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8147-6277-6 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8147-7066-5 (pb : alk. paper)
I. Title.
[DNLM: 1. Women’s Health—history—United States. 2. Women’s Rights—history—United States. 3. History, 20th Century—United States. 4. History, 21st Century—United States. 5. Reproductive Rights—history—United States. WA 11 AA1]
RA564.85
613’.04244—dc23 2014027536
New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability. We strive to use environmentally responsible suppliers and materials to the greatest extent possible in publishing our books.
Manufactured in the United States of America
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Also available as an ebook
To Jerold Nelson and Nola Sterling{~?~ST: end chapter}
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 “Medicine May Be the Way We Got in the Door”: Social Justice and Community Health in the Mid-1960s
2. “Thank You for Your Help . . . Six Children Are Enough”: The Abortion Birth Control Referral Service
3. Reproductive Control, Sexual Empowerment: The Aradia Women’s Health Center and the Early Movement for Feminist Health Reform
4. Conserving Feminist Health Care, Confronting Anti-Abortion: The Atlanta Feminist Women’s Health Center
5. “All This That Has Happened to Me Shouldn’t Happen to Nobody Else”: Loretta Ross and the Women of Color Reproductive Freedom Movement of the 1980s
6. Women of Color and the Movement for Reproductive Justice: A Human Rights Agenda
Notes
Index
About the Author
Acknowledgments
After finishing my first book, I wondered if I would ever write another. Juggling a young son, single parenthood, and a new job as an assistant professor of women’s and gender studies made the task seem daunting. But I kept at it; “slow and steady wins the race,” a graduate school mentor once told me. In the end, a book is a labor of love and gets written because it needs to be written. That was the case with this book because in many ways it completes my first book. I had left so much unwritten.
This book could not have been written without a full-year sabbatical supported by the University of Redlands. Redlands also generously granted travel funds to help complete research during that year. I had been working little by little on a series of articles, but the year away from courses and administrative duties as director of the Women’s and Gender Studies Program finally allowed me the time to understand the scope of this larger project and how I might complete it as a book.
Several colleagues at the University of Redlands have been consistently supportive by sharing ideas, escaping for coffee or drinks (while sharing ideas), and reading chapters of this book in article form. The three colleagues (and dear friends) who top this list are Dorene Isenberg, Kathleen Feeley, and Priya Jha. Other friends and colleagues at the University of Redlands have motivated me through inspiration: these include Leela MadhavaRau, Kelly Hankin, Karen Derris, Leslie Brody, Emily Culpepper, and Kathy Ogren.
Beatrix Hoffman, another good friend and graduate student comrade at Rutgers, read and commented on several chapters while they were still in article form. Beatrix has also been an inspiration since our graduate school years. I thank her for her intelligence and insight into medical and health care history and politics.
Rickie Solinger has also provided motivation and support over the years. She was one of the readers of the manuscript draft and later revealed that to me. Her critical and constructive comments on the earlier drafts certainly made this book stronger. I also thank the anonymous second reader for her careful comments.
I had the very good fortune to be invited to the summer 2013 conference in Münster, Germany, titled “Refocusing the Modern American Family.” I want to thank the organizers of that conference for inviting me and allowing me to present a portion of this book. That conference also afforded me the opportunity to meet Johanna Schoen, who very kindly agreed to take time out of her very busy schedule to read the manuscript in its entirety. Her careful feedback most certainly improved the book, while all errors still remain my own, of course.
I also presented portions of this book at the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture while visiting Duke University on a Mary Lily Research Grant. Archivist Laura Micham provided invaluable assistance with the Feminist Women’s Health Center Records. Smith College granted me a Margaret Storrs Griers Research Grant, which facilitated travel to and use of the Sophia Smith Collection.
Several activists granted me interviews for this book. I won’t name all of them here, but I need to explicitly thank Loretta Ross, scholar and activist for reproductive justice. Loretta’s social justice activism and powerful advocacy for women with the least access to reproductive control over their lives has been a true inspiration. She also read the manuscript in its entirety before publication, for which I am also truly grateful.
I also want to thank Denise Spencer for her unfailing administrative support. Her humor and personal strength are terrific bonuses. I couldn’t direct the Women’s and Gender Studies Program without her.
My students at Redlands have also helped me link teaching to research pursuits. Their curiosity about feminist activism encourages me to believe that feminism is alive and well with young