Looking through the Speculum
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Looking through the Speculum
Highlights local history to tell a national story about the evolution of the women's health movement, illuminating the struggles and successes of bringing feminist dreams into clinical spaces.
The women's health movement in the United States, beginning in 1969 and taking hold in the 1970s, was a broad-based movement seeking to increase women's bodily knowledge, reproductive control, and well-being. It was a political movement that insisted that bodily autonomy provided the key to women's liberation. It was also an institution-building movement that sought to transform women's relationships with medicine. The movement was dedicated to increasing women's access to affordable health care without the barriers of homophobia, racism, and sexism. But the movement did not only focus on women's bodies. It also encouraged activists to reimagine their relationships with one another, to develop their relationships in the name of personal and political change, and, eventually, to discover and confront the limitations of the bonds of womanhood.
Looking through the Speculum examines historically the emergence, development, travails, and triumphs of the women's health movement in the United States. By bringing medical history and the history of women's bodies into our emerging understandings of second-wave feminism, the author sheds light on the understudied efforts to shape health care and reproductive control beyond the hospital and the doctor's officeโin the home, the women's center, the church basement, the bookshop, and the clinic. Lesbians, straight women, and women of colour all play crucial roles in this history. At its center are the politics, institutions, and relationships created by and within the women's health movement, depicted primarily from the perspective of the activists who shaped its priorities, fought its battles, and grappled with its shortcomings.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9780226830865
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 19 January 2024
Country: United States
Imprint: University of Chicago Press
Illustration: 16 halftones
Audience: Professional and scholarly
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 28.0mm
Width: 152.0mm
Height: 229.0mm
Weight: 567g
Pages: 384
Collections
About the Author
Judith A. Houck is professor of history and gender and womenโs studies at the University of WisconsinโMadison.
No collection found for handle: uncategorised
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