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Marie Stopes' Sexual Revolution and the Birth Control Movement

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book examines the life, work and contraversial achievements of Marie Stopes, author and pioneer of the birth control movement in the interwar period. As the centenary of the ground-breaking publication of Married Love approaches, this study traces and reassesses Marie's remarkable achievements, considering the literary, scientific and political themes of her life's work. Clare Debenham analyses how Stope's personal life led her to turn away from palaeobotany to concentrate on transforming the country's sexual relationships by writing Married Love. Utilising extensive unpublished archive research, biographies, letters, and interviews with her friends and relatives, Debenham demonstrates that Stopes's work on sexual relationships has overshadowed her considerable achievements including her scientific career as a paleaobotantist, her literary success in the interwar period, and her work, with help from suffragists, in establishing the first British birth control clinic. 

List of contents

1. The challenge of Marie Stopes.- 2. Family values.- 3. Passionate about palaeobotany.- 4.  From Married Love to Enduring Passion.- 5. Birth Control: The Start of Marie Stopes' Campaign.-  6. The Growth of the Constructive Birth Control Clinics.- 7. Marie and Her Correspondents.- 8. Battles with Doctors, Clergy and Politicians.- 9. Marie Stopes as a Maverick Eugenicist.- 10. Epilogue.-

About the author

Clare Debenham is Honorary Research Associate at the University of Manchester, UK. Since the 1970s she has been an active campaigner on women’s issues, and her previous publications include Birth Control and the Rights of Women: Post-Suffrage Feminism in the Twentieth Century (2014).

Summary

This book examines the life, work and contraversial achievements of Marie Stopes, author and pioneer of the birth control movement in the interwar period. As the centenary of the ground-breaking publication of Married Love approaches, this study traces and reassesses Marie’s remarkable achievements, considering the literary, scientific and political themes of her life’s work. Clare Debenham analyses how Stope’s personal life led her to turn away from palaeobotany to concentrate on transforming the country’s sexual relationships by writing Married Love. Utilising extensive unpublished archive research, biographies, letters, and interviews with her friends and relatives, Debenham demonstrates that Stopes's work on sexual relationships has overshadowed her considerable achievements including her scientific career as a paleaobotantist, her literary success in the interwar period, and her work, with help from suffragists, in establishing the first British birth control clinic. 

Product details

Authors Clare Debenham
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9783319716633
ISBN 978-3-31-971663-3
No. of pages 164
Dimensions 147 mm x 219 mm x 16 mm
Weight 365 g
Illustrations XVI, 164 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Natural sciences (general)

C, Women, Gender Studies, History, European History, Social History, Social & cultural history, History of Science, Social and cultural anthropology, Gender identity, Gender studies, gender groups, History of Britain and Ireland, Great Britain—History, Gender and Sexuality, Gender studies: women & girls, Women's Studies

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