In the 1980s, a subset of anti-abortion activists in the US claimed the existence of ‘post-abortion syndrome’ (PAS), a mental illness resulting from the trauma of abortion. Appropriating vocabulary from 1970s feminist health activism, these anti-abortion activists argued against the main goal of that movement, reproductive justice. Instead, conservative and essentialist PAS activists argued ‘aborted women’ needed to take control of their health by telling their stories of victimisation. Using interviews, congressional hearings and contemporary texts, this article uses PAS to discuss tensions over women's mental health amid the 1980s' backlash.
CITATION STYLE
Moran, R. L. (2021). A Women’s Health Issue?: Framing Post-Abortion Syndrome in the 1980s. In Gender and History (Vol. 33, pp. 790–804). John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.12554
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