4.04.2011

Leading Post: Anon & Arcan


Anonymous – “How it all Began: I Have Had an Abortion”

This short piece focuses on the movement to decriminalize abortions in Europe. Women were restricted and so were physicians who felt restricted by the law to perform such operation. Furthermore, there were many women that died because of illegal abortions. These women hoped that decriminalizing abortions would not only decrease the number of mortalities related to unprofessional abortions as well as pave a path towards liberation for women.

These women were correct; as soon as the restriction on abortion was lifted, there was an immediate decline in abortion-related death. The organization of women who protested anti-abortion laws confessed publicly to having abortions before and are speaking for the right of every other women to choose to have one as well. This public campaign and confession attempts to take a taboo topic and deconstruct it to make society face it. By confessing in public, they’re upsweeping the topic of abortion from underneath the rug and forcing society to consider the rationality behind decriminalizing abortions.

What I found to be interest in the beginning was how the upper-class German women, through the manipulation of magazines and other media outlets, was trying to give the impression that German women are better than the Americans, the British, the French. They didn’t want liberation and there was “no anger” as a German woman put it (356). This I find to be absurd and also shows how feminists break off into class and often get caught fighting each other instead of the oppressing systems.

Lastly, this text pushes the fact that the fight for abortion is much less about abortion than it is about seeking self-determination for all women.

Arcana – Abortion is a Motherhood Issue

What I found to be immediately eye-catching about Arcana’s piece was how she singled out the biological construct of a woman and emphasized the sexual reproductive system. By doing this, I think she highlights the toll of childbirth on a woman’s body that many tend to overlook. She only gave birth to one child and she can feel and imagine the toll it had on her once “youthful cervix” (225).

We can understand why she started off with this as well because it relates to her background. She performs abortions and she is speaking about abortion in this article to argue that the topic should be not separated from other discussions involving motherhood. It is very much related and for the sake of convenience, we tend to separate discussions of abortion from discussions of contraception, sterilization, and the mothering process. Arcana insist that we lose value to the conversation when we separate it out. Opponents of abortion utilize this “scatteredness” and isolates one thing to attack advocates of abortion, usually singling out the fetus/baby and forgetting about the mother who has the responsibility to raise this child for the rest of her life. A choice that should belong solely to the mother is instead made open for public discussion and indoctrination of ideas. Our society does not accept that “every women who choose to abort a pregnancy is justified in her decision,” (226).

Arcana touches on something separate from the political argument as well. In the recalling of civilizations in the past and in different parts of the world, she brings up that these societies have respected “that matters of life and death belonged in the hands of the mothers,” (226). A woman should not be shamed and ridden by regret and guilt because a society decides this punishment. It’s not fair and Arcana insist that we need a society that is open to recognizing our “joys and sadnesses, our regrets or reliefs,” (227). After all, no one should ever tell us how we should feel.

1 comment:

  1. For the "How it all Began" article I agree with Samantha in her interpretation of the article. I also found interesting that the women in the upper class were manipulated by the magazines. I really believe they didn't want to come out about the abortion issues because of their status in society. If it ended up not being a big issue then they could be dealing with major societal problems.

    Arcana's article deals with her life example. I also agree with Samantha's interpretation of the article, but I don't agree with Arcana on the comparison between abortions and other life decisions. I think it is a bigger decision then she is making it out to be and every women's experience is different. I agree with Samantha when she says that no one should tell us how we feel. Everyone feels different about situations and there is nothing wrong with feeling the way you do. It is a natural reaction.

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