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Paperback America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation Book

ISBN: 0465024599

ISBN13: 9780465024599

America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

In 1960, the FDA approved the oral contraceptive that would come to be known as the pill. Within a few years, millions of women were using it. At a time when the population was surging, many believed that the drug would help eradicate poverty around the globe, ensure happy and stable marriages, and liberate women. In America and the Pill, preeminent social historian Elaine Tyler May reveals the ways in which the pill did and did not fulfill...

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History and Current Events

50 years ago, this past May 2010, the FDA announced approval for the birth control pill. In the early 60's, the pill was heralded as a mean to contain the population explosion, eradicate war and poverty worldwide and ensure stable marriages. As the decade unfolded, many credited or blamed the pill for the sexual revolution that became worldwide. Professor May offers a unique personal perspective on the drug's history: her father was a clinical researcher who worked on developing the pill, and her mother was involved in the birth control movement. In the early 70's, at her father's suggestion, she joined a clinical trial of the new pill and her medical records are now among the thousands used to document the safety and effectiveness of the slow-dose pill. Other topics discussed in this study include the women who have been responsible for the pill's success, from Margaret Sanger and Katherine McCormick to the hundreds of women who volunteered for the early, risky clinical trials. Men's changing relationship to the pill and numerous efforts to create an oral contraceptive for men are also discussed. Reviewed by Claude Ury

Outstanding book

Historian May traces the development of the contraceptive pill and concludes: The feminist movement liberated women and used the pill as an important tool to gain control over their lives; there is no evidence that the pill caused a boom in premarital sex; and the pill has had little impact on world fertility rates or overpopulation. May shows that the pill simply enlarged the repertory of methods available to women to reduce the power gap between men and women. "The pill has been at the center of the major transformations in women's lives over the past half-century." And she shows "how much has changed and how much has remained the same." May traces the legal battles over contraception and also focuses on the Vatican "old boys club" 1968 rejection of its own theological commissioners' 73 to 10 recommendation that it relax its opposition to contraception, a rejection ignored by the overwhelming majority of Catholics. This book easily rates five stars. --- Edd Doerr, President, Americans for Religious Liberty
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