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392 pages, Hardcover
First published October 13, 2014
Kind of an odd read. I might recommend this to someone interested in the history of birth control in the US, but I think I would lean towards something more like American and the Pill by Elaine Tyler May, rather than this text.
While this book is full of interesting information about how the creation of the birth control pill came about, after doing more research on the subject I would agree with other critics by saying that it seems to lack an intersectional lens. Like many books in this literature, I would say it leans toward a white, cishet, and middle-class recollection of historical events.
One clear issue was the failure to condemn Margaret Sanger's connections to eugenics at the time. While this is certainly a nuanced subject (eugenics was the most commonly upheld belief at the time, though that is no reason to endorse it as having any sort of legitimacy), Eig seems to breeze over this fact without elaboration longer than a couple of paragraphs. If Planned Parenthood has gone so far as to remove her name from the original clinic she founded because of her connections, Eig could have talked about the ethics of her involvement for more than a moment.
Additionally, this is more of an observation than a criticism, but Eig is a journalist, not a feminist historian, and a cisgender white man. I believe that this has greatly informed the text; unlike other books I've read on the subject (those written by feminist historians), I find that Eig lacks oral histories, a historically matrilineal way to convey information. He uses facts and historical documents to paint a picture for us, giving us imagined dialog from our main characters.
Overall, this text is a decent foundation, but I feel as though it lacks social context; the way black and brown people experience the changing scene of reproductive justice in America is vastly different from white women's experiences. Plus, queer and trans people have very different experiences as well. Simply, this book seems to lack that vital context.