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Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger
by David M. Kennedy, 320 pp, $8.75, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970.
Marjorie C. Meehan, MD, Reviewer
Chicago
JAMA. 1970;213(7):1197.
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While we discuss the relative merits of various contraceptive methods, and the difficulty in educating "backward" people to limit population growth, we may forget that only a few decades ago it was illegal and generally considered immoral to give any information about birth control. As late as 1932, the AMA executive committee refused a proposal to conduct a study of contraception because it was a controversial subject. The gradual acceptance of birth control in the United States is largely due to the efforts of a few people, especially Margaret Sanger.
Mrs. Sanger, a nurse married to an architect, after a few years of sub-urban domesticity, became involved with a group of radicals, including Eugene Debs, John Reed, and Emma Goldman. She crusaded for various causes, but after witnessing a death from attempted abortion, decided to devote all her efforts to the emancipation of women and the dissemination of birth control
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
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