In the early 20th century, contraceptives were illegal and, for many, especially religious groups, taboo. But, in the span of just two years, between 1929 and 1931, many of the United States’ most prominent religious groups pronounced contraceptives to be moral and began advocating for the laws restricting them to be repealed. Met with everything from support, to silence, to outright condemnation by other religious groups, these pronouncements and the debates they caused divided the American religious field by an issue of sex and gender for the first time. This article explains why America’s religious groups took the positions they did at this crucial moment in history. In doing so, it demonstrates that the politics of sex and gender that d...
People have long taken measures to control their fertility. Through the use of abortion, withdrawal,...
This paper examines views of women among the most prominent “progressive” American relig...
Lynn and Carol Hogue, “Anthony Comstock: A Religious Fundamentalist\u27s Negative Impact on Reproduc...
In the early 20th century, contraceptives were illegal and, for many, especially religious groups, t...
Early proponents of contraception among American religious groups were staunch eugenicists who promo...
Early proponents of contraception among American religious groups were staunch eugenicists who promo...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
Abstract: This article chronicles the impact on sexuality policy in the United States of the rise of...
Religious Involvement and the Attitudes Toward Birth Control Carly Jacobs, Rachel LaFont, Whitney Wr...
While Margaret Sanger made great strides in the crusade for legalization and open access to birth co...
The abstinence movement in the USA, as a sector of the Christian Right, advocates abstinence before ...
Many religious leaders in the early 1900s were afraid of the immoral associations and repercussions ...
Since this country’s founding, women of color have had little control over their reproductive freedo...
Mary Jo Huth, who holds her doctoral degree from St. Louis University, is chairman of the Department...
In 1873, the Comstock Act labeled contraceptive information and materials obscene and banned their d...
People have long taken measures to control their fertility. Through the use of abortion, withdrawal,...
This paper examines views of women among the most prominent “progressive” American relig...
Lynn and Carol Hogue, “Anthony Comstock: A Religious Fundamentalist\u27s Negative Impact on Reproduc...
In the early 20th century, contraceptives were illegal and, for many, especially religious groups, t...
Early proponents of contraception among American religious groups were staunch eugenicists who promo...
Early proponents of contraception among American religious groups were staunch eugenicists who promo...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
Abstract: This article chronicles the impact on sexuality policy in the United States of the rise of...
Religious Involvement and the Attitudes Toward Birth Control Carly Jacobs, Rachel LaFont, Whitney Wr...
While Margaret Sanger made great strides in the crusade for legalization and open access to birth co...
The abstinence movement in the USA, as a sector of the Christian Right, advocates abstinence before ...
Many religious leaders in the early 1900s were afraid of the immoral associations and repercussions ...
Since this country’s founding, women of color have had little control over their reproductive freedo...
Mary Jo Huth, who holds her doctoral degree from St. Louis University, is chairman of the Department...
In 1873, the Comstock Act labeled contraceptive information and materials obscene and banned their d...
People have long taken measures to control their fertility. Through the use of abortion, withdrawal,...
This paper examines views of women among the most prominent “progressive” American relig...
Lynn and Carol Hogue, “Anthony Comstock: A Religious Fundamentalist\u27s Negative Impact on Reproduc...