Friday, September 27, 2024

ABORTION STORIES: DEEP CARE: The Radical Activists Who Provided Abortions, Defied the Law, and Fought to Keep Clinics Open, & WE CHOOSE TO: A Memoir of Providing Abortion Care Before, During, and After Roe


DEEP CARE: The Radical Activists Who Provided Abortions, Defied the Law, and Fought to Keep Clinics Open
ANGELA HUME

AK Press (non-affiliate Amazon link)
$10.99 Kindle edition, available now

Rating: 4* of five

The Publisher Says: The story of the radical feminist networks who worked outside the law to defend abortion.

Starting in the 1970s, small groups of feminist activists met regularly to study anatomy, practice pelvic exams on each other, and learn how to safely perform a procedure known as menstrual extraction, which can empty the contents of the uterus in case of pregnancy using equipment that can be easily bought and assembled at home. This “self-help” movement grew into a robust national and international collaboration of activists and health workers determined to ensure access to reproductive healthcare, including abortion, at all costs―to the point of learning how to do the necessary steps themselves.

Even after abortion was legalized in 1973 with Roe v. Wade, activists continued meeting, studying, and teaching these skills, reshaping their strategies alongside decades of changing legal, medical, and cultural landscapes such as the legislative war against abortion rights, the AIDS epidemic, and the rise of anti-abortion domestic terrorism in the 1980s and 90s. The movement’s drive to keep abortion accessible led to the first clinic defense mobilizations against anti-abortion extremists trying to force providers to close their doors. From the self-help movement sprang a constellation of licensed feminist healthcare clinics, community programs to promote reproductive health, even the nation’s first known-donor sperm bank, all while fighting the oppression of racism, poverty, and gender violence.

Deep Care follows generations of activists and clinicians who orbited the Women's Choice clinic in Oakland from the early 1970s until 2010, as they worked underground and above ground, in small cells and broad coalitions and across political movements with grit, conviction, and allegiances of great trust to do what they believed needed to be done―despite the law, when required. Grounded in interviews of activists sharing details of their work for the first time, Angela Hume retells three decades of this critical, if under-recognized story of the radical edge of the abortion movement. These lessons are more pertinent than ever following the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision and the devastation to abortion access nationwide.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.

My Review
: By limiting her scope to activists in the Bay Area of California, Author Hume enables herself to dive deeply into the whys, hows, and wherefores of the activists who believed then, and will inspire others now to believe, in the truest expression of "self-help." There is a huge weight of wrongheadedness and immorality bearing down on women's rights. There always has been, of course; patriarchy isn't a new idea, and making up a matriarchal past from evidence so fragmentary as to be useless for tendentious argument is not particularly helpful to resisting the current, powerful, well-funded assault.

Author Hume does not shy away from graphic evocation of the procedures she enumerates the activists providing. It's astonishing to me how very difficult pregnancy is...to start, to finish, to understand in its myriad complexities. It was not always pleasant to encounter this information.

The broader framework of resistance and activism on multiple social fronts in that fifty-years-gone time and place is not skimped. The long-gone groups, their interlocking aims, their interpenetration of membership, wildly proliferate and birth acronym after abbreviation thus are correspondingly difficult to keep track of. As is so often the case among resisters of any facet of the status quo, the vicious internecine fights are hard to read about. I have this wild, unruly desire to scream at the idiots fighting over nonsense to grow up and get a grip! Fight the right-wingers in charge, not each other! It's just handing the rotters victory in their efforts to control and exploit everone for fun and profit to fight among yourselves!

I took long breaks from this read to avoid having more strokes from fury at the dimwits who refuse to accept impure, compromise positions because they are RIGHT and that should be OBVIOUS so everyone should do as they say! Which is, oddly enough, exactly what the right-wingers say.

Funny, that.

The thrust of this book is, as I see it, what worked before can work again. Get your gloves out, the literal healthcare ones and the metaphorical battle ones. The world's going to go into reverse unless we all do a LOT OF RESISTING, at ballot boxes, at clinic-defense events, at community meetings.

It worked before, it can again, but not without personal, individual commitments to show up in the flesh. Slacktivism is helpful to direct the conversation but more is needed to oppose the wave of nightmare invasive evil laws.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


WE CHOOSE TO: A Memoir of Providing Abortion Care Before, During, and After Roe
CURTIS BOYD & GLENNA HALVORSON-BOYD

Disruption Books (non-affiliate Amazon link)
$11.49 Kindle edition, available now

Rating: 4* of five

The Publisher Says: Although the Dallas Fire Department had saved the clinic, we were shaken and heartsick that our son had just spent Christmas Day at a crime scene. I had performed my first abortion in the year Kyle was born, and though he had long supported our work, he now felt worried for us in ways he’d never expressed. As we stood near the ruins, breathing fresh air in gulps, he said, “Do you have to keep doing this work?”

We were both silent for long moments before I simply said, “No. We choose to.”

In this deeply personal account, Dr. Curtis Boyd and Dr. Glenna Halvorson-Boyd reflect on their lives in abortion care, from the childhood experiences that shaped their paths to the Supreme Court decision that forced the closure of their Dallas clinic. Their stories begin in the 1960s, as Curtis opens a clandestine abortion practice while breaking with the beliefs of his Baptist family and Glenna pursues psychology while coming to understand the world of restrictive gender roles. When the two of them meet shortly after abortion is legalized, they bond over a common commitment to women, forming a professional and personal partnership that will weather the coming decades. We Choose To is the story of that partnership, and the staff and patients that have shaped the history of modern abortion.

In these pages, Curtis and Glenna share their holistic, morally rooted approach to their work. Led by a desire to empower patients, they advance abortion and mental health care further than ever even as they find themselves at the center of a controversial new issue in American life. Sweeping, introspective, and deeply honest, We Choose To is a rare portrait of abortion providers and the world in which they work, where abortion is not a talking point in a culture war but a private, even spiritual, act.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.

My Review
: If you're wondering what kind of person is drawn to resist social injustice, read this joint memoir by two powerfully rooted in faith people. They set themselves out to provide care for women who were not being served in their time of need by any system allegedly meant to do so.

I'm strongly anti-religion because people like the authors are far too seldom to be found in the ranks of churchgoers. These people are exemplars of walking the walk while self-awarely not talking the most frquently heard talk from the faith they once shared.

I emerged from this read far more ready to smile about the world's future. These deeply admirable people have raised kids and lived lives of service and, by example, inspired others. What more can one ask?

Thank you both for sharing your motivations and reasons for being genuinely good.

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