Description

Book Synopsis

Abortion in the Weimar Republic is a compelling subject since it provoked public debates and campaigns of an intensity rarely matched elsewhere. It proved so explosive because populationist, ecclesiastical and political concerns were heightened by cultural anxieties of a modernity in crisis. Based on an exceptionally rich source material (e.g., criminal court cases, doctors’ case books, personal diaries, feature films, plays and literary works), this study explores different attitudes and experiences of those women who sought to terminate an unwanted pregnancy and those who helped or hindered them. It analyzes the dichotomy between medical theory and practice, and questions common assumptions, i.e. that abortion was “a necessary evil,” which needed strict regulation and medical control; or that all back-street abortions were dangerous and bad. Above all, the book reveals women’s own voices, frequently contradictory and ambiguous: having internalized medical ideas they often also adhered to older notions of reproduction which opposed scientific approaches.



Trade Review

“[The author’s] careful analysis of multiple discourses, makes clear how innovative the debate over abortion in Weimar Germany was. The popular cultural evidence and the medical discourse and the criminal law cases tell us somewhat different things about how abortion was understood at this historical moment; Usborne's analysis and juxtaposition of these various meanings is masterful and persuasive.” · H-German

“…The author offers a shift of paradigm in the history of abortion in Weimar Germany by writing a history of everyday life from the point of view of lower-class women as well as revealing the professional interests of physicians. Even committed sex reformers like the Munich gynaecologist Adams Lehmann appear ambivalent since she sterilised her abortion patients on eugenic grounds without consent.” · Historische Zeitschrift

"...a richly textured analysis of medical and lay abortion discourses and practices, artistic representations of the procedure, and of women's, particularly lower-class women's, own perceptions and experiences of abortion. Skilfully using an impressive variety of sources, Usborne provides a meticulous, insightful, and lively study that questions some of the continuing assumptions about the Weimar Republic.and provides an exciting example of how to approach the history of the body." · Medical History

“Based on a careful reading of court files, this investigation reveals a rich and often ambiguous repertoire of perceptions and descriptions…Cultures of Abortion is not only the seminal study on one of the most contested and high-profile issues in Weimar politics, it is also a superb demonstration of how ‘gender’ can be used to complicate well established historical narratives. · German History

“With inspiration from Alltagsgeschichte(history of the everyday) and body history, Usborne presents a fascinating collection of stories about how abortion was practiced in both rural and urban, medicalized and folk-healing contexts...[It] performs several valuable services. It brings us far closer to the actual experiences of Weimar women who underwent abortions than we have ever been before, it usefully questions our tendency to respect complex medical procedures over simpler but often just as effective techniques, and it provides considerable evidence that the practice and social acceptance of abortion were far more widespread in this period than previously appreciated." · Bulletin of the History of Medicine

“Historically, abortion was a key coordinate of sexual lives and heteroerotic experiences. Placing those lives and experiences into meaningful engagement with abortion history remains a daunting but vital challenge for its historians, one to which Usborne’s innovative study makes a wonderful contribution.” · Cultural and Social History

“This revealing study teases out the various ways that official discourses often clashed with women‚s everyday experiences and attitudes towards abortion…Overall, this monograph is an important addition for any scholar interested in abortion, the body, medical discourses, gender and modern Germany.” · H-Soz-u-Kult

“Usborne provides a vivid picture not only of...individuals, but of the communities that they lived in and the social networks that facilitated their relationships and contacts. Many of her conclusions are fascinating...[a] compelling book.” · German Studies Review

“The book includes introductory and concluding chapters that effectively place the story in the historiography of modern Germany and of modern abortion and, more broadly, the female body. Usborne’s monograph contains much of worth and interest for scholars and students of modern Germany, gender relations, sexuality, medicine, and, certainly, abortion.” · American Historical Review



Table of Contents

List of Plates
Preface

Chapter 1. Towards a Cultural History of Abortion
Historical perspectives
Cultures of abortion in Weimar Germany

Chapter 2. Cultural Representation: Abortion on Stage, Screen and in Fiction
Abortion in the movies
The novel Gilgi and the female reader and spectator
Socialist plays and novels
Abortion pathologized

Chapter 3. Medical Termination of Pregnancy: Theory and Practice
The case of Dr Hartmann
Abortion in the medical discourse
Divided opinion within the medical profession
Medical blunders and legal practice
The case of Dr Hope Bridges Adams Lehmann
Financial considerations
Medical attitude and medical power
Women’s experience

Chapter 4. Abortion in the Marketplace: Lay Practitioners and Doctors Compete
The anti-quackery campaign
Self-induced abortions
Lay abortionists
Gender and the abortionist
The careers of ‘wise women’
The safety record of quack abortionists
Methods and money
Class differences and shared culture

Chapter 5. Women’s Own Voices: Female Perceptions of Abortion
The construction of the criminal in abortion trials
The experience of abortion
‘Blocked menses’ (Blutstockung) as a popular lay concept
Advertising abortifacients
Women’s sensory perceptions

Chapter 6. Abortion as an Everyday Experience in Village Life: A Case Study from Hesse
Rural communities in decline
Female communication networks
Reproductive Eigensinn
Rebellious women and men
Relations between the sexes
The career of a successful abortionist
Denunciation
Conclusions

Chapter 7. Abortion in Early Twentieth-century Germany: Continuity and Change
Gender roles and gender relations
The blurring of boundaries
Continuity and change
Abortion in Nazi Germany
Continuity with Imperial Germany

Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Cultures of Abortion in Weimar Germany

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    A Hardback by Cornelie Usborne

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      View other formats and editions of Cultures of Abortion in Weimar Germany by Cornelie Usborne

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/12/2007
      ISBN13: 9781845453893, 978-1845453893
      ISBN10: 1845453891

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Abortion in the Weimar Republic is a compelling subject since it provoked public debates and campaigns of an intensity rarely matched elsewhere. It proved so explosive because populationist, ecclesiastical and political concerns were heightened by cultural anxieties of a modernity in crisis. Based on an exceptionally rich source material (e.g., criminal court cases, doctors’ case books, personal diaries, feature films, plays and literary works), this study explores different attitudes and experiences of those women who sought to terminate an unwanted pregnancy and those who helped or hindered them. It analyzes the dichotomy between medical theory and practice, and questions common assumptions, i.e. that abortion was “a necessary evil,” which needed strict regulation and medical control; or that all back-street abortions were dangerous and bad. Above all, the book reveals women’s own voices, frequently contradictory and ambiguous: having internalized medical ideas they often also adhered to older notions of reproduction which opposed scientific approaches.



      Trade Review

      “[The author’s] careful analysis of multiple discourses, makes clear how innovative the debate over abortion in Weimar Germany was. The popular cultural evidence and the medical discourse and the criminal law cases tell us somewhat different things about how abortion was understood at this historical moment; Usborne's analysis and juxtaposition of these various meanings is masterful and persuasive.” · H-German

      “…The author offers a shift of paradigm in the history of abortion in Weimar Germany by writing a history of everyday life from the point of view of lower-class women as well as revealing the professional interests of physicians. Even committed sex reformers like the Munich gynaecologist Adams Lehmann appear ambivalent since she sterilised her abortion patients on eugenic grounds without consent.” · Historische Zeitschrift

      "...a richly textured analysis of medical and lay abortion discourses and practices, artistic representations of the procedure, and of women's, particularly lower-class women's, own perceptions and experiences of abortion. Skilfully using an impressive variety of sources, Usborne provides a meticulous, insightful, and lively study that questions some of the continuing assumptions about the Weimar Republic.and provides an exciting example of how to approach the history of the body." · Medical History

      “Based on a careful reading of court files, this investigation reveals a rich and often ambiguous repertoire of perceptions and descriptions…Cultures of Abortion is not only the seminal study on one of the most contested and high-profile issues in Weimar politics, it is also a superb demonstration of how ‘gender’ can be used to complicate well established historical narratives. · German History

      “With inspiration from Alltagsgeschichte(history of the everyday) and body history, Usborne presents a fascinating collection of stories about how abortion was practiced in both rural and urban, medicalized and folk-healing contexts...[It] performs several valuable services. It brings us far closer to the actual experiences of Weimar women who underwent abortions than we have ever been before, it usefully questions our tendency to respect complex medical procedures over simpler but often just as effective techniques, and it provides considerable evidence that the practice and social acceptance of abortion were far more widespread in this period than previously appreciated." · Bulletin of the History of Medicine

      “Historically, abortion was a key coordinate of sexual lives and heteroerotic experiences. Placing those lives and experiences into meaningful engagement with abortion history remains a daunting but vital challenge for its historians, one to which Usborne’s innovative study makes a wonderful contribution.” · Cultural and Social History

      “This revealing study teases out the various ways that official discourses often clashed with women‚s everyday experiences and attitudes towards abortion…Overall, this monograph is an important addition for any scholar interested in abortion, the body, medical discourses, gender and modern Germany.” · H-Soz-u-Kult

      “Usborne provides a vivid picture not only of...individuals, but of the communities that they lived in and the social networks that facilitated their relationships and contacts. Many of her conclusions are fascinating...[a] compelling book.” · German Studies Review

      “The book includes introductory and concluding chapters that effectively place the story in the historiography of modern Germany and of modern abortion and, more broadly, the female body. Usborne’s monograph contains much of worth and interest for scholars and students of modern Germany, gender relations, sexuality, medicine, and, certainly, abortion.” · American Historical Review



      Table of Contents

      List of Plates
      Preface

      Chapter 1. Towards a Cultural History of Abortion
      Historical perspectives
      Cultures of abortion in Weimar Germany

      Chapter 2. Cultural Representation: Abortion on Stage, Screen and in Fiction
      Abortion in the movies
      The novel Gilgi and the female reader and spectator
      Socialist plays and novels
      Abortion pathologized

      Chapter 3. Medical Termination of Pregnancy: Theory and Practice
      The case of Dr Hartmann
      Abortion in the medical discourse
      Divided opinion within the medical profession
      Medical blunders and legal practice
      The case of Dr Hope Bridges Adams Lehmann
      Financial considerations
      Medical attitude and medical power
      Women’s experience

      Chapter 4. Abortion in the Marketplace: Lay Practitioners and Doctors Compete
      The anti-quackery campaign
      Self-induced abortions
      Lay abortionists
      Gender and the abortionist
      The careers of ‘wise women’
      The safety record of quack abortionists
      Methods and money
      Class differences and shared culture

      Chapter 5. Women’s Own Voices: Female Perceptions of Abortion
      The construction of the criminal in abortion trials
      The experience of abortion
      ‘Blocked menses’ (Blutstockung) as a popular lay concept
      Advertising abortifacients
      Women’s sensory perceptions

      Chapter 6. Abortion as an Everyday Experience in Village Life: A Case Study from Hesse
      Rural communities in decline
      Female communication networks
      Reproductive Eigensinn
      Rebellious women and men
      Relations between the sexes
      The career of a successful abortionist
      Denunciation
      Conclusions

      Chapter 7. Abortion in Early Twentieth-century Germany: Continuity and Change
      Gender roles and gender relations
      The blurring of boundaries
      Continuity and change
      Abortion in Nazi Germany
      Continuity with Imperial Germany

      Abbreviations
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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