Abortion under Apartheid : Nationalism, Sexuality, and Women's Reproductive Rights in South Africa
Abortion under Apartheid : Nationalism, Sexuality, and Women's Reproductive Rights in South Africa
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Author(s): Klausen, Susanne M.
ISBN No.: 9780190939878
Pages: 344
Year: 201901
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 47.48
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Her monograph Abortion Under Apartheid: Nationalism, Sexuality, and Women''s Reproductive Rights in South Africa presents the first scholarly study of the history of abortion in any African country. It is meticulously researched, using a wide variety of sources, and yet is accessible in style. In eight chapters, it demonstrates the centrality of the regulation of women''s reproductive bodies to the making and maintenance of Apartheid in South Africa from 1948 to 1990, situating the struggle over abortion in the context of disciplining whites'' sexuality as part of the ongoing ideological work of justifying white supremacist rule." -- Waltraud Maierhofer, Feminist Review "The history of abortion and, indeed, of reproductive rights more broadly has received relatively little attention in African contexts. Susanne Klausen''s study of abortion under apartheid is therefore both welcome and significant. Using interviews and a range of documentary sources, the book examines how the apartheid state sought to control women''s and girls'' bodies and reproductive choices through the enforcement of restrictive abortion laws and the promotion of a patriarchal Christian Afrikaner culture, and, crucially, the ways in which women and girls defied these restrictions.This is a passionately argued, sensitive book, which lays a foundation for future research on abortion in South Africa and the broader region."--Sacha Hepburn, Journal of Southern African Studies "Susanne Klausen''s moving and timely book sheds powerful light on the interplay of abortion policy and the defence of white male supremacy in apartheid South Africa.


Klausen aims [to write] a rich enhancement of our empirical knowledge about the role of abortion in South African history, and a compelling theoretical argument to extend gender and sexuality studies into mainstream scholarship. She ably succeeds in both these aims, drawing upon a wide range of sources including newspapers, memoirs, court transcripts, official documents, and interviews with some of the key players in the struggles mostly from the 1960s to eighties. These sources evoke the tumble of emotions experienced by the victims of cruel laws and harsh social judgements, the passion of activists in the struggle for women''s rights, and the often rank hypocrisy of those appointed to police the morality of the nation."--Marc Epprecht, Histoire sociale "This study makes a powerful case that concerns over restricting abortion were about policing women''s bodies within a conservative patriarchal community in order to maintain its reputation, one is tempted to say, ''honour''. It is distressing to learn from the conclusion that although a very liberal law was passed by the African National Congress government in 1996, clandestine abortion remains ubiquitous in South Africa for complex reasons including continuing stigmatising attitudes, lack of resources, and inadequate public health education."--Leslie Hall, Women''s History Review "Drawing on a compelling range of sources, including novels, popular press stories, oral history interviews, medical journals, and university and hospital records, Klausen argues that white, South African social elites vehemently opposed abortion as part of their wider obsession with the sanctity of the so-called white race.South African historiography has tended to focus on either white or black South Africans, given that apartheid actively worked to divide these populations. By contrast, Klausen here includes black and white women''s experiences with abortion.


In doing so, she demonstrates the entanglements of racism and its effects on white and black life in South Africa."--Rachel Sandwell, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences "Susanne M. Klausen should be commended for writing a book that is compelling, timely, and highly original.In this elegantly written narrative, Klausen explains that gender and sexuality were just as important as race or class to the construction and maintenance of the apartheid system.There is much to appreciate about this book. Besides being innovative and very well researched, the book is written in accessible language. The author is a gifted storyteller who has the ability to captivate her audience through her engaging prose. She helps us realize that this is a story that is much larger than ''just'' abortion.


Indeed, it is a story of nation-building and of state collapse, one that is painfully written on the bodies of women.It is certainly not one to be missed."--Alicia C. Decker, American Historical Review "Abortion Under Apartheid is a beautifully written, multi-dimensional, and convincingly argued examination of women''s reproductive choices under the South African apartheid regime."--The Canadian Commission on Women''s History Book Prize "The author does not keep her sharp analysis hermetically sealed off from global and colonial forces. She is alert to the wider historiography, to the intersection of race and class, of masculinity and women''s reproductive rights. She has trolled through dozens of newspapers, a dozen archives, conducted multiple interviews, and like every good historian, read almost every single secondary source on her subject. The reader will be pulled into an engaging, riveting and horrifying set of stories, one in which vulnerable human beings, professionals and activists are caught in a vortex of cultural and gendered politics.


Here are the stories of courage and victimization of both black and white couched in the politics of a regime in its death throes."--Chris Youe, Canadian Association of African Studies, on behalf of the Joel Gregory Prize Committee "This meticulously researched volume helps redress the privileging of race and class, together with a persistent gender blindness, in much South African historiography on apartheid. In this powerful and clearly argued study of the apartheid politics of fertility, Klausen shows how Afrikaner nationalism was persistently active in its attempts to control women''s sexuality.Klausen provides complex and sympathetic accounts of the experiences of women of all races caught up in this nightmare world."--Anne Digby, Social History of Medicine "This meticulously researched landmark study by Susanne M. Klausen explores the complex ways in which interlinked ideologies concerning race, gender and sexuality underpinned the restrictions placed by the South African apartheid state on women''s access to reproductive rights, in particular to safe abortion.The book is written in an engaging, accessible style, although the subject matter makes for disturbing reading at times. Klausen shows.


that, while abortion legislation in contemporary South Africa is amongst the most progressive in the world, for many South African women access to safe, affordable abortion remains a challenge, and Klausen calls for ''the struggle for reproductive rights'' to be ''connected to the broader struggle for social justice and human rights'' (p. 218). It is a call which should resonate with everyone who reads this troubling but important book."--The English Historical Review "This wonderful book on a controversial topic, composed by one of the leading scholars of gender and health in recent South African history, begins with a simple premise: the illegality of abortion in Apartheid South Africa did not result in a dearth of terminations. Instead, Klausen argues that the history of women''s health is heavily informed and indeed constructed by the experience of women and their practitioners dealing with the ramifications of abortion''s illegality. Klausen implores us to look at this period as one during which abortion and its aftermaths were central to the history of women''s health, even as it appears absent from the public record. In so doing, we are forced to reorient the conceptualization of women''s health in South Africa, and to rethink the centrality of gender to histories of health more generally."--Canadian Bulletin of Medical History.



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