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1. “After All, a Woman is Biologically a Child Factory” – Eugenics and the Debate on Family Planning for African Americans in the 1920s and Early 1930s
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Anne Overbeck
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements VII
- Contents IX
- List of Figures XIII
- List of Abbreviations XV
- Introduction 1
- 1. “After All, a Woman is Biologically a Child Factory” – Eugenics and the Debate on Family Planning for African Americans in the 1920s and Early 1930s 23
- 2. “Tomorrow’s Families” – Modernization Discourses and the Changing View on African American Women 55
- 3. “The Zero Population Growth Game” – Debating Black Motherhood in the Age of Population Control 91
- 4. “A National Effort [to Establish] a Stable Negro Family Structure” – Poverty, Illegitimacy, and Black Motherhood in the 1960s 131
- 5. In Sickness and in Health – Discussing Reproductive Rights in the Age of Crack, AIDS, and Women’s Health 167
- Conclusion and Outlook 213
- Bibliography 223
- Index 243
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements VII
- Contents IX
- List of Figures XIII
- List of Abbreviations XV
- Introduction 1
- 1. “After All, a Woman is Biologically a Child Factory” – Eugenics and the Debate on Family Planning for African Americans in the 1920s and Early 1930s 23
- 2. “Tomorrow’s Families” – Modernization Discourses and the Changing View on African American Women 55
- 3. “The Zero Population Growth Game” – Debating Black Motherhood in the Age of Population Control 91
- 4. “A National Effort [to Establish] a Stable Negro Family Structure” – Poverty, Illegitimacy, and Black Motherhood in the 1960s 131
- 5. In Sickness and in Health – Discussing Reproductive Rights in the Age of Crack, AIDS, and Women’s Health 167
- Conclusion and Outlook 213
- Bibliography 223
- Index 243