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A Miscarriage of Justice

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A Miscarriage of Justice examines women's reproductive health in relation to legal and medical policy in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. After the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the onset of republicanis...
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  • 14 January 2020
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A Miscarriage of Justice examines women's reproductive health in relation to legal and medical policy in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. After the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the onset of republicanism in 1889, women's reproductive capabilities—their ability to conceive and raise future citizens and laborers—became critical to the expansion of the new Brazilian state. Analyzing court cases, law, medical writings, and health data, Cassia Roth argues that the state's approach to women's health in the early twentieth century focused on criminalizing fertility control without improving services or outcomes for women. Ultimately, the increasingly interventionist state fostered a culture of condemnation around poor women's reproduction that extended beyond elite discourses into the popular imagination.

By tracing how legal thought and medical knowledge became cemented into law and clinical practice, how obstetricians, public health officials, and legal practitioners approached fertility control, and how women experienced and negotiated their reproductive lives, A Miscarriage of Justice provides a new way of interpreting the intertwined histories of gender, race, reproduction, and the state—and shows how these questions continue to reverberate in debates over reproductive rights and women's health in Brazil today.

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Price: $32.00
Pages: 376
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 14 January 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503611320
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Roth's remarkably wide-ranging research offers a comprehensive and nuanced analysis of the science, law, politics, and lived experiences surrounding women's reproduction in Rio de Janeiro in the first half of the twentieth century. Deeply contextualized in the social, economic, and cultural history of post-abolition Brazil, A Miscarriage of Justice interrogates the dialogue between local and global histories of medical and legal sciences while maintaining focus on individual women whose reproductive lives were increasingly pathologized and criminalized. This remarkable book is sure to become required reading in the fields of Latin American and gender history."—Sueann Caulfield, University of Michigan
Cassia Roth is Assistant Professor of History and Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the University of Georgia.
Introduction:
1. The Law of Responsibility, the Medicine of Gender, the Science of Race
2. Constructing Motherhood: Obstetricians, Politicians, and the Creation of a Reproductive Healthcare System
3. Birthing Life and Death: Childbirth, Stillbirth, and Maternal Mortality
4. A "Plague of Criminal Abortions": Fertility Control and the Consolidation of Medical Authority
5. Ouvi Dizer [Heard Said]: Rumor, Sex, and Race in the Republican Capital
6. Policing Pregnancy: Statecraft, Poverty, and Reproductive Health
7. Prosecuting Honor, Defending Madness: Abortion and Infanticide in the Courts
Conclusion: