Are Women Full Citizens?: The Abortion Debate, and the “Gifts” of Life and Poverty

This essay explores fertility’s impact on economics and the gendered relations of power among humans in patriarchy. By definition, patriarchs rule through fertility—their status depends upon the exclusion of women from policymaking by means of childbearing. When forced to bear and rear early, women...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elizabeth Gregory
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New York City College of Technology 2017-07-01
Series:NANO
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nanocrit.com/issues/issue11/Are-Women-Full-Citizens-The-Abortion-Debate-and-the-Gifts-of-Life-and-Poverty
Description
Summary:This essay explores fertility’s impact on economics and the gendered relations of power among humans in patriarchy. By definition, patriarchs rule through fertility—their status depends upon the exclusion of women from policymaking by means of childbearing. When forced to bear and rear early, women receive limited education and have neither skills nor time to object. The availability of birth control and abortion transforms this situation. This essay argues that anti-reproductive-choice arguments based on the premise that an unborn potential child has received an individual “gift of life” which it is the mother's duty to host occlude the way that the arrival at maturity of human lives depends on the ongoing gift of parents’ (principally mothers’) time and energy. When this “gift” is coerced, it blocks the innovative participation and skills development of huge portions of the population.
ISSN:2160-0104