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Abortion Under Apartheid examines the politics of abortion in South
Africa during the apartheid era (1948-1990), when termination of
pregnancy was criminalized. It analyzes the flourishing clandestine
abortion industry, the prosecution of medical and "backstreet"
abortionists, and the passage in 1975 of the country's first
statutory law on abortion. Susanne M. Klausen reveals how ideas
about sexuality were fundamental to apartheid culture and shows
that the authoritarian National Party government - alarmed by the
spread of "permissiveness" in white society - attempted to regulate
white women's reproductive sexuality in the interests of
maintaining white supremacy. A major focus of the book is the
battle over abortion that erupted in the late 1960s and early
1970s, when doctors and feminists, inspired by international
developments, called for liberalization of the colonial-era common
law that criminalized abortion. The movement for legal reform
spurred a variety of political, social, and religious groups to
grapple with the meaning of abortion in the context of changing
ideas about the traditional family and women's place within it.
Abortion Under Apartheid demonstrates that all women, regardless of
race, were oppressed under apartheid. Yet, although the National
Party was preoccupied with denying young, unmarried white women
reproductive control, black girls and women bore the brunt of the
lack of access to safe abortion, suffering the effects on a
shocking scale. At the heart of the story are the black and white
girls and women who - regardless of hostility from partners,
elders, religious institutions, nationalist movements, conservative
doctors and nurses, or the government - persisted in determining
their own destinies. Although a great many were harmed and even
died as a result of being denied safe abortion, many more succeeded
in thwarting opponents of women's right to control their capacity
to bear children. This book conveys both the tragic and triumphant
sides of their story.
As the South African War reached its grueling end in 1902, colonial
interests at the highest levels of the British Empire hand-picked
teachers from across the Commonwealth to teach the thousands of
Boer children living in concentration camps. Highly educated, hard
working, and often opinionated, E. Maud Graham joined the Canadian
contingent of forty teachers. Her eyewitness account reveals the
complexity of relations and tensions at a controversial period in
the histories of both Britain and South Africa. Graham presents a
lively historical travel memoir, and the editors have provided rich
political and historical context to her narrative in the
Introduction and generous annotations. This is a rare primary
source for experts in Colonial Studies, Women's Studies, and
Canadian, South African, and British Imperial History. Readers with
an interest in the South African War will be intrigued by Graham's
observations on South African society at the end of the Victorian
era.
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