Susanne M. Klausen
Oxford University Press
October 2015
ISBN: 9780199844494
Abortion Under Apartheid traces the
criminalization of abortion in South Africa during the apartheid era
(1948-1990), the emergence of a flourishing clandestine abortion
industry, and 1975 passage of the country's first statutory law on
abortion. The book examines the politics of sexuality,
racism and nationalism in apartheid culture, arguing that the
authoritarian National Party Government regulated white women's
reproductive sexuality in the interests of maintaining white supremacy.
One major focus is the battle that erupted in the late 1960s when
doctors and feminists called for
liberalization of the colonial-era laws criminalizing abortion. The
movement for abortion law reform spurred a variety of political, social
and religious groups to grapple with the meaning of abortion in the
context of changing ideas about the traditional family and women's place
within it. Abortion
Under Apartheid shows that all women, regardless of race, were
oppressed under apartheid. Yet, although the National Party was
preoccupied with denying young white women reproductive control, black
women bore the brunt of the lack of access to safe abortion, suffering
the effects of clandestine
abortion on a shocking scale in urban centers around the country.
At the heart of the story are the black and white girls and women who -- regardless of hostility from partners, elders, religious institutions, nationalist movements, conservative doctors and nurses, or the racist regime -- persisted in determining their own destinies. Although a great many were harmed and even died as a result of being denied safe abortion, many more succeeded in thwarting opponents of women's right to control their capacity to bear children. This book conveys both the tragic and triumphant sides of their story.
At the heart of the story are the black and white girls and women who -- regardless of hostility from partners, elders, religious institutions, nationalist movements, conservative doctors and nurses, or the racist regime -- persisted in determining their own destinies. Although a great many were harmed and even died as a result of being denied safe abortion, many more succeeded in thwarting opponents of women's right to control their capacity to bear children. This book conveys both the tragic and triumphant sides of their story.
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