1st Edition

Intimate Politics Fertility Control in Global Historical Perspective

Edited By Cassia Roth, Diana Paton Copyright 2025

    This book places the intimate experience of fertility control at the heart of political and social approaches toward women’s bodies.

    Across the globe, women have always controlled their fertility through intimate efforts ultimately tied to larger political processes and gendered power dynamics. Women’s biological reproductive capabilities have been contested sites of power struggles, shaping the formation, rule, and dissolution of political regimes throughout history. Yet these intersections between the intimate and the political remain understudied in the historical literature. This book explores these questions from the perspective of multiple time periods, geographic locations, actors, and methods. Chapters analyze how women’s individual practices of fertility control, including contraception, abortion, and infanticide, alongside methods for achieving conception and birth, intersected with larger political, economic, and cultural trends. Others problematize the ideas of ‘control’ in history. What did it mean to ‘control one’s fertility’ in different historical periods and geographical regions? How did historical actors understand and practise what we now call fertility control? How can we expand conventional definitions of fertility control to interrogate ideas related to infertility, menstruation, and heteronormativity? Contributors also highlight how race, ethnicity, and class intersect with gender to shape if, and how, women and men approached fertility control. This book will be of great value to students and scholars of history including the history of the body, women’s rights, and health equity, as well as the intersectionality of gender and health.

    The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Women’s History Review.

    Introduction

    Cassia Roth and Diana Paton

     

    Part I: Concepts and Categories

     

    1. Fertility control in ancient Rome

    Rebecca Flemming

     

    2. Who’s in control? Varying and changing translations of ‘birth control’ in Japan

    Aiko Takeuchi-Demirci

     

    Part II: Law, Medicine, and Religion

     

    3. ‘Performing public piety:’ Infanticide and reproductive agency in Reformation Spain

    Nazanin Sullivan

     

    4. The many meanings of aborto: Pregnancy termination and the instability of a medical category over time

    Elizabeth O’Brien

     

    5. Debates on family planning and the contraceptive pill in the Irish magazine Woman’s Way, 1963–1973

    Laura Kelly

     

    Part III: States and Families

     

    6. Bringing the law home: Abortion, reproductive coercion, and the family in early twentieth-century China

    Ling Ma

     

    7. In the family way: Incest, fertility control, and the power of the patriarchal family in Brazil

    Cassia Roth

     

    Part IV: Imperial Power and Local Realities

     

    8. ‘It is impossible to judge the extent to which the crime is prevalent’: Infanticide and the law in India, 1870–1926

    Daniel J. R. Grey

     

    9. Embodied sources: abortion, medicine, and the law in early twentieth-century British Guiana

    Juanita De Barros

     

     Afterword: Governing reproduction

    Laura Briggs

    Biography

    Cassia Roth is Associate Professor in the Department of Society, Environment, and Health Equity at the University of California, Riverside, USA. She is the author of A Miscarriage of Justice: Women’s Reproductive Lives and the Law in Early Twentieth-Century Brazil and articles in Gender & History, Journal of Women’s History, Slavery & Abolition, Medical History, and História, Ciências, Saúde – Manguinhos, among others. She has an MPH in Epidemiology and a PhD in History. 

    Diana Paton is William Robertson Professor of History at the University of Edinburgh. Her books include No Bond but the Law: Punishment, Race and Gender in Jamaican State Formation, 1780-1870, and The Cultural Politics of Obeah: Religion, Colonialism and Modernity in the Caribbean World.