I believe anyone who calls themself a feminist should read this book. There is so much I thought I knew about reproductive health and rights until I read this book. Now I know I have so much more to learn.
The book focuses on reproductive rights and the ethics of developing/using technology that would allow ectogenisis. This is the gestation of a fetus outside of the human body. The book is factual and informative, but not neutral.
Throughout the book, she agrees that our legal and social systems are unfair and outright harmful for all women. However, she argues that even "liberal" and "feminist" advocates and policy makers throughout history have knowingly or unknowingly placed the rights of white, cis women above Black, Indigenous, Asian, and LGBTQ+ women and pregnant people. She maintains that white, cis women have always had better access to abortion, contraceptives, and other reproductive health resources, while at the same time, marginalized women are not only denied these same resources, but are criminalized for using them. In addition, she shares how many WOC/LGBTQ+ women are coerced into giving away their reproductive rights under legal or financial pressures. She uses statistics to highlight these legal and social barriers that marginalized women face.
Throughout the book, she makes it clear that while "progressive" or "liberal" advocates might be fighting for women's reproductive rights, true progress cannot be made unless white, cis women are decentralized. She gives a really good example of how a lot of feminst groups advocate for the right to choose abortion. While women should of course be able to choose to have an abortion, she explains how that view alone is white-centric. It does not acknowledge that thousands of Black and Indigenous women in the USA, UK, Canada, and many other countries have been forcefully sterilized, even if these women wanted to have a baby. Forced sterilizations didn't stop until the 1970s... Also even in modern day, marginalized women who want to have a child are denied, either due to lack of safe health resources, or even being forced to use long-term contraceptives in order to even access health resources. She gives specific examples of this.
Point being, she asserts that there cannot be true progress unless the reproductive rights of ALL women are secured and protected. These includes the right to terminante a pregnancy, or even to be pregnant in the first place. And she outlines all the social and legal barriers that must be dismantled for true equity.
im tired of writing this review but this book is so good and so inspiring and you should go read this book especially if u call yourself a feminist. there is so much to learn.