Killing the Black Body: The Urgency of Reproductive Justice

by Flora Stone Mather Center for Women

Lecture/Speaker

Back to The Essentials of Reproductive Justice: Access, Autonomy, and Action

Tue, Oct 11, 2022

11:30 AM – 12:30 PM EDT (GMT-4)

Add to Calendar

Private Location (sign in to display)

View Map
17
Registered

Registration

Details

Dorothy E. Roberts, George A. Weiss University Professor of Law & Sociology, Raymond Pace & Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professor of Civil Rights,Professor of Africana Studies & Director, Penn Program on Race, Science & Society, University of Pennsylvania will be in conversation with Colette Ngana, Doctoral Candidate, Department of Sociology, CWRU, Chair, Board of Directors, Preterm. In Killing the Black Body, Dorothy Roberts gives a powerful and authoritative account of the on-going assault - figurative and literal - waged by the American government and our society on the reproductive rights of Black women. From an intersection of charged vectors (race, gender, motherhood, abortion, welfare, adoption, and the law), Roberts addresses in her impassioned book such issues as: the notion of prenatal property imposed upon slave women by white masters; the unsavory association between birth control champion Margaret Sanger and the eugenics movement of the 1920s; the coercive sterilization of Black women (many of whom were unaware that they had undergone the procedure) under government welfare programs as late as the 1970s; the race and class implications of distributing risky, long-acting contraceptives, such as Norplant, through Medicaid; the rendering of reproduction as a crime of prosecuting women who expose their fetuses to drugs; the controversy over transracial adoption; the welfare debate (who should pay for reproduction?); and the promotion of the new birth technology (in vitro fertilization and egg donation) to serve infertile white couples.

Hosted By

Flora Stone Mather Center for Women | Website | View More Events

Contact the organizers