Undoubtedly the most influential advocate for birth control even
before the term existed, Margaret Sanger ignited a movement that
has shaped our society to this day. Yet her star has waned. A
frequent target of so-called family values activists, she has also
been neglected by progressives, who cite her socialist leanings and
purported belief in eugenics. In this captivating biography, the
renowned feminist historian Jean H. Baker rescues Sanger from such
critiques and restores her to the vaunted place in history she once
held.
Trained as a nurse, Sanger saw the dangers of unplanned pregnancy
and pioneered the first family planning clinic, the forerunner to
Planned Parenthood. The movement she started spread across the
country, eventually becoming a vast international organization with
her as its spokeswoman. Baker demonstrates that Sanger's staunch
advocacy of women's privacy and freedom extended to her personal
life as well: after abandoning the trappings of home and family for
a globe-trotting life, she became notorious for the sheer number of
her romantic entanglements. That she lived long enough to witness
the advent of "free love" and the creation of the birth control
pill--which finally made planned pregnancy a reality--is only
fitting.
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