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Skidmore College
American Studies Department

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AM 230: Born in American

Mary C. Lynn, TLC 329, x5025

An exploration of the changing ways in which American women have experienced contraception, abortion, pregnancy, and childbirth from 1587 to the present.  We will examine developments in technology, law, medicine, the economy, and the role and position of women and the family in society as they have influenced the reproductive lives of American,women, using sources from the history of medicine, social history, literature, legal and constitutional studies, government and sociology.  Issues we will consider include social childbirth and the role of the midwife in the colonial period, the masculinization of obstetrics, introduction of anesthesia, and criminalization of abortion in the nineteenth century, the struggle for reproductive freedom and the introduction of hospital birth, as well as the legalization of abortion and introduction of alternative birthing patterns in the twentieth century.  By analyzing these topics, reading about them, writing about them, and thinking about and discussing various aspects of each, we will work to gain a greater understanding of how social change occurs, and what studying reproduction can tell us about the evolution of American society.

SPRING 2010 Syllabus