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Birthcontrol And The Work Of Margaret Sanger

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 6.48
  Total Words: 1619
  Total Characters: 7961
  Number of Sentences: 94


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 17.22
  Characters per Words: 4.92


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 65.46
  Fog Scale Level: 11.02
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 8.41  

Birthcontrol And The Work Of Margaret Sanger

"A free race cannot be born" and no woman can call herself free who does not own and control her body.  No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother"(Sanger A 35).  Margaret Sanger (1870-1966)said this in one of her many controversial papers.  The name of Margaret Sanger and the issue of birth control have virtually become synonymous.  Birth control and the work of Sanger have done a great deal to change the role of woman in society, relationships between men and woman, and the family. The development and spread of knowledge of birth control gave women sexual freedom for the first time, gave them an individual identity in society and a chance to work without fearing they were contributing to the moral decline of society by leaving children at home.  If birth control and Sanger did so much good to change the role of women in society why was birth control so controversial?
     Although birth control and other forms of contraceptives did not fully become legal until the 1960’s they had been developed nearly seventy years earlier in the forms the are still prevalent today (Birth
Control in America). The modern condom, or “...rubber was invented in 1870, but [it] was not the thin latex type…” that is currently prevalent in our society (Hoag Levins 2). An early form of the birth control pill, which Margaret Sanger advocated, was also in existence in the very late 1800’s (Birth Control in America).  Contraception was considered an ethical issue, in that the majority of Americans believed it was a form of abortion and therefor it was considered amoral (Birth Control in America).  The laws of Sanger's day “...forced women into celibacy on one hand, or abortion on the other" (Sanger B 3). Why did it take so long to spread and legalize something with the potential to better the lives and life styles of women and families in the early 1900’s?  It could be partially attri...

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