Surgery and Salvation
The Roots of Reproductive Injustice in Mexico, 1770–1940
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O'Brien illustrates how ideas about maternal worth and unborn life developed in tandem. Eighteenth-century priests sought to save unborn souls through cesarean section, while nineteenth-century doctors aimed to salvage some unmarried women's social reputations via therapeutic abortion. By the twentieth century, eugenicists wished to regenerate the nation's racial profile, in part by sterilizing women in public clinics. The belief that medical interventions could redeem women, children, and the nation is what O'Brien refers to as "salvation though surgery." As operations acquired racial and religious significances, Indigenous, Afro-Mexican, and mixed-race people's bodies became sites for surgical experimentation. Even during periods of Church-state conflict, O'Brien argues, the religious valences of experimental surgery manifested in embodied expressions of racialized, and often-coercive, medical science.
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Release date
October 16, 2023 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781469675886
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781469675886
- File size: 2211 KB
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Languages
- English
Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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