Read America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation Online
Authors: Elaine Tyler May
Tags: #History, #United States, #20th Century, #Modern, #Social History, #Social Science, #Abortion & Birth Control
CHAPTER 7
Susan G, 26; Carol O, 29. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes in this chapter are from respondents to the Internet survey. Notes in- clude information provided by the respondents.
Anne S, 21, married, bisexual, ex-military, living below poverty line.
Alice Z, 30, married, white straight. She and her sisters are first- generation college attendees and first-generation birth control pill users. Atheist, Democrat. From a poor, working-class, fundamental- ist Christian, small-town family. “My parents are still together but miserable.”
Elizabeth M, 23.
Martha L.
Kelly R.
Jessica P, age 38, married, nonmonogamous, bisexual, a lawyer.
The call for stories was circulated on e-mail to numerous people who also sent it to others; it was also posted on feministing.com and linked to other sites. There were no survey questions, simply a call for people to respond with their thoughts and experiences. Although most of the respondents are women under age 40, some older women and a few men also responded. The respondents came from a wide range of racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds, marital status, and sexual orientations.
Melissa G.
Samantha J, 23.
Jessica P, age 38, married, nonmonogamous, bisexual, lawyer.
Karen E, 21, bisexual, living with boyfriend for 3 yrs.
http://www.thepill.com/thepill/shared/pi/Tri-Cyclen_Lo_PI
.pdf#zoom=100, accessed 1/1/09.
http://www.webmd.com/sex/birth-control/birth-control-pill, ac- cessed 1/1/09; http://kidshealth.org/teen/sexual_health/contraceptio
n/ contraception_birth.html, accessed 1/1/09.
http://www.epigee.org/guide/pill_sex.html, accessed 1/1/09.
Mandy B.
Helen P, 20.
Valerie J, 24.
Barbara E, married.
Sally G, 27.
Caroline Tiger, “10 myths about the pill busted,” CNN Web site, March 13, 2007, http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEAL
TH/03/13/ healthmag.pill/index.html.
Susan G, 26, chemical engineer, divorced, now living with her partner.
Katie M, 22, white, grad student, bisexual, single.
Jenny B, age 31, married, bisexual, began pill at 15, from a small town in north Florida.
Kristy H, 23.
Melissa B, 26.
Carrie R, 20, student, Canada.
Linda L, 27, white, pharmacy tech.
Erika B.
Carolyn P, 20.
Anita K, 25.
Julie D, 29.
Jane B, Melissa G, Carol O, 29.
Kristol R, 29.
As researcher Sheldon Segal explained regarding the placebo phase of the pill, “This schedule was not a medical requirement, but a marketing decision based on the belief that women consider men- struation as natural, and would be reluctant to use a product that stopped their periods.” With the newly formulated pills, “Finally, women will be freed from the control of marketers who decided that women want to have a pseudo-menstruation every month. They’ll be able to decide themselves.” Segal,
Under the Banyan Tree
, p. 78.
Robyn E, 22, Oxford, England.
Mary M, 23.
Linda O, 20.
Letty C, 27.
Jane D.
Natasha Singer, “A Birth Control Pill That Offered Too Much,”
New York Times
, Feb. 11, 2009, www.ny
times.com/2009/ 02/11/business/11pill.html?_r=1&hp.
Lauren C, 23.
Renae J, 20.
Lucy T, Canadian, 20, student, single.
Regina H.
Marianne B.
Lorena A, age 20.
Lynn E, 34, librarian, white, married 7 years to first boyfriend, only sex partner.
Cassie K, 24.
Shelley H, 27.
Alissa A, age 28, married six years, liberal, college graduate, sexually active since age 18.
Sue G, 22.
Mandy B, 26.
Kendra H, 23.
Jacqueline G, writer and executive producer, married.
Rose H, 27.
Anita B, 26, graduate student.
“National Conference of State Legislators Pharmacist Con- science Clauses: Laws and Legislation,”
www.ncsl.org/Default.aspx? TabId=14380, updated May 2009; Saundra Young, “White House set to reverse health care conscience clause,” www
.cnn.com/2009/ POLITICS/02/27/conscience.rollback/index.html 2/27/09CNN.
Katie M, 22-year-old white graduate student from Indiana, nondenominational Christian, bisexual, single.
Krista A, 34, graduate student in medical science, married.
Amy K, age 25, Midwestern, married, feminist.
Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, “FDA to allow ‘morning-after’ pill for 17-year-olds,” Associated Press, April 23, 2009; baltimoresun.com 4/25/09, “The politics of Plan B: Our view: Morning-after pill for teens is safe, but no substitute for doctor’s care”; Marc Kaufman, “Nonprescription Sale Sought for Contraceptive; Petition to FDA to Offer ‘Morning After’ Pill Over the Counter Could Become Entan- gled in Abortion Debate,”
Washington Post,
April 21, p. A02; Susan Aschoff, “In Case of Emergency Break Glass: Birth Control Has Backup,”
St. Petersburg Times
(Florida), April 09, 2002, South Pinel- las Edition, p. 3D.
Krista A, 34, grad student in medical science, married.
Cathy P, 20.
CONCLUSION
“The Age of the Thing,”
The Economist,
December 25, 1993, Section Modern Wonders, p. 47 (U.K. Edition, p. 87).
Quote and data from Sheldon J. Segal,
Under the Banyan Tree
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 77.
William D. Mosher, Ph.D.; Gladys M. Martinez, Ph.D.; Anjani Chandra, Ph.D.; Joyce C. Abma, Ph.D.; and Stephanie J. Wilson, Ph.D., Division of Vital Statistics, “Use of Contraception and Use of Family Planning Services in the United States: 1982–2002,”
Advance Data From Vital and Health Statistics
, Department of Health and Human Services, Number 350, December 10, 2004.
Judy G, 23, Internet survey respondent.
In 2002, 7 percent of single women whose partners used condoms also used the pill, although double protection was much less common among married women. See Mosher et al., “Use of Contraception.”
Boston Women’s Health Book Collective,
Our Bodies, Ourselves
(New York: Touchstone, 2005 edition), pp. 332, 347.
Andrea Tone,
Devices and Desires
(New York: Hill and Wang, 2001), pp. 203, 233–236.
Abortion
conscience clause, 163–164 conservative political agenda in
the US, 54–55
early use as birth control, 4, 15–16
Hefner’s support of, 61 illness and death, 17
leading to birth control use, 85
Playboy
’s criticism of the Catholic Church stance, 65–66
postwar difficulties in obtaining, 77–78 Abstinence-only education programs, 55, 150
Access, 162, 170
college women in the 1960s, 83–89
Comstock Law limiting, 16, 18–20
conscience clauses, 163–165
conservatives limiting, 16,
18–20, 55
developing countries, 37–38,
52–555
morning-after pill, 165–166
Playboy
’s stance on, 65–66 poor African American
women, 47–50
Acne, 156–157
African Americans contraception controversy
within the black community, 49–51
women’s concerns over family planning, 46–48
Age of pill users, 152–153 Agent U5897, 107
Aristophanes, 45
Asian governments, 51
Baby boom, 2–3, 74
Baraka, Amiri, 49
Barrier method, 4, 15, 146, 169.
See also
Condoms; Diaphragm
Barry, Marion, 138 Bayer Health Care
Pharmaceuticals, 157
Beal, Frances, 49–50
Beat generation, 59
Bender, Jonathan, 113 Birth control clinics
defying restrictive laws, 118 McCormick’s involvement in
Sanger’s, 22
men targeting, 50 proliferation in the US, 39–40 Sanger’s clinic, 18–19
Birth Control Federation of America.
See
Planned Parenthood Federation of America
Birth control movement, 18–20, 22, 38–39
Birth defects, 128
Birthrate, 15, 37
Births, out-of-wedlock, 77, 81–82
Bisexuality, 146–147
Black Power movement, 49 Boston Women’s Health Book
Collective (BWHBC), 134–136
Brautigan, Richard, 59–60
Brave New World
(Huxley), 23 Brody, Jane, 109–110
Brown, Helen Gurley, 61 Brown, Quentin, 114
Brown University, 87
Bucalo, Louis, 104–105 Buck, Pearl S., 71–72 Buckley, James, 54 Bush, George H. W., 54
Bush, George W., 54–55, 163–164
Buxton, C. Lee, 118
Cactus in the Snow
(film), 90 Cade, Toni, 49
Cairo Agenda, 54–55
Calderone, Mary, 69
Capitalism, 3
Cartoons, 63–64 Catholic Church
Hefner’s criticism of, 65–66 institutional stance on family
planning, 119–126 opposition to population
control, 41
pill use in spite of ban, 118 Rock’s tension with, 26–27,
122–123, 126
Chang, Min-Chueh, 24 China
male contraceptive development, 113–114
one-child-per-couple policy, 51 search for effective male
contraceptives, 96–97
Chisholm, Shirley, 50
Chou En-Lai, 96
The Christian Century,
121 Civil disobedience, 18 Clinical and informal trials
author’s involvement in, 8 male contraceptives, 112, 114 psychiatric patients’ forced
participation, 27–28, 95 Puerto Rican trials, 29–31
Clinton, Bill, 54 Coercion
drug trials, 27–28, 95 international birth control
policies, 51–52 Norplant use, unsuccessful
attempts, 137–139 College campuses, sexual
revolution on, 84–89
Communism, 37, 41–42
Comstock, Anthony, 16, 18
Comstock Law (1873), 16, 18–20
Condoms, 4, 100, 146, 150–151,
161
Conscience clauses, 163–165
Conservative views, 80–81 Contraceptive saturation
programs, 52 Contraceptive use
alternatives to the pill, 169 contemporary alternatives, 144 contraception as vice, 16 current figures on, 168–169 laws restricting, 118 nineteenth-century methods,
15–16
pre-pill alternatives, 4 women and teens’ failure to
use, 83–84
See also
Condoms; Diaphragm
Cosmopolitan
magazine, 61
Coviello, Andrea, 113 Crane, Frederick E., 19 Curtis, Lindsay R., 98–99
Dalkon Shield, 103, 131–132, 140 Dangers of the pill, 5–6
Dating customs, 75
David Susskind Show,
133 Davis, Hugh, 131–132
Dawes, Marvin, 49
D.C. Women’s Liberation, 132–133
Death
Dalkon Shield, 103, 131–132 equating the pill with, 59–60 side effects, 128
deFelice, Jose, 33 Demographics.
See
Statistical
information
Depo Provera, 136–137
Depression, 155 Developing world
access to birth control, 53–54 concerns about overpopulation,
45–46
male contraceptives, 106–107
Norplant, 137 personal and political
ambivalence over international birth control, 50–51
search for effective male contraceptives, 96–97
Diaphragm, 5, 22, 72–73, 77–78,
89–90
Dichter, Ernest, 62 Disease, contraception as
prevention and cure of, 19 Djerassi, Carl, 14, 24–25
The Doctors’ Case Against the Pill
(Seaman), 97, 130–132
Dosages, 130, 136, 168 “Dottie Makes an Honest
Woman of Herself” (McCarthy), 77–78
DuBois, W. E. B., 48
The Economist,
167 Education
abstinence-only programs, 55,
150
McCormick’s activism for, 21 Effectiveness of the pill, 1, 169
Ehrlich, Paul, 44
Eisenhower, Dwight D., 22, 43,
53, 119
Eisenstadt v. Baird,
118 Emergency contraception,
164–166
Emotional side effects, 154–155 Empowerment and emancipation
of women
birth control movement, 17 challenging religious and
political authority, 117–119
developing countries, 52 family harmony replacing, 20 impact of the pill over time,
143–146
male contraceptive, 97–98,
115–116
men’s concerns over Pincus’s research, 23–24
pill’s promise and success, 13–14, 168
political and personal mobilization of women, 170–171
Sanger’s belief in, 24–25, 40 separating contraception from
sexual intercourse, 57–58
sexual revolution, 72
threatening men, 5–6 women’s sexual responsibility,
157–159
Enovid, 5, 32–34, 95
Epigee Women’s Health, 147–148
Ericsson, Ronald, 111
Esquire
magazine, 101, 105–106 Ethics
conscience clauses, 163–164
involuntary testing, 27–28, 95 Norplant use in developing
countries, 137–138 teens and pill use, 154
Eugenics
choice and coercion in birth control, 48–49
global population control, 38–39
Oneida Perfectionists’ group marriage, 15
population explosion and, 37 racist tone of population
control, 47
Sanger’s involvement with, 19–21
Fahim, Mostafa S., 106–107 Family development, 3 Family planning
Catholic Church stance on, 120–126
conservatives’ attempts to underfund and undermine clinics, 55