Read America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation Online
Authors: Elaine Tyler May
Tags: #History, #United States, #20th Century, #Modern, #Social History, #Social Science, #Abortion & Birth Control
pill as key to, 14, 79–80 Family values.
See
Values “Father of the Pill,” 14 Fatherhood,
Playboy
’s view of,
62–64
Fawcett, Don, 111 Feminist movement
development of a male contraceptive, 97–98
encouraging sexual exploration, 149–150
impact on women today, 145–146
origins and development of, 3 parental support for teens and
the pill, 153–154
Playboy
philosophy and, 61–63
reproductive control leading to feminism, 151–152
Sanger and McCormick’s activism, 14–15
sexual revolution, 89 women’s increasing
involvement in research and development, 170
Ferber, Andrew, 68
Fertility Awareness Method (FAM), 161–162
Fertility control, 15, 23, 29
Fertility rate, 52–53, 56
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (1938), 32
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
approval process, 1, 3, 8, 32–33 author’s father’s role in delay of
approval, 8
increasing caution of, 111 menstrual irregularity
compound, 4–5
morning-after pill, 164–165 noncontraceptive benefits of
the pill, 157
Norplant and Depo Provera, 136–138
side effects and health risks of the pill, 133
thalidomide tragedy, 127
Foreign policy, 53–54 Free love advocates, 16
Gag rule, 54–55
Gamble, Clarence, 30, 47
Gandhi, Indira, 51, 96
G.D. Searle pharmaceuticals, 5, 32–33
Genocide: birth control as black genocide, 49–50
The Girl, the Body, and the Pill (film), 90
Global problems, pill as panacea for, 2–3, 6, 34.
See also
Overpopulation; Poverty
Goldman, Emma, 16, 38–39
Good Housekeeping
magazine, 94, 108
Goodbye Columbus
(Roth), 78, 89–90
Gossypol, 96–97
Griswold, Estelle, 118
Griswold v. Connecticut,
118 Group marriage, 15
Guilt, sex and, 82–83, 150–151,
153
Haden, William “Bouie,” 50 Hall, Robert E., 121–122 Harvard College, 23, 25–26 Health, Education, and Welfare
(HEW) Department, 50 Health care.
See
Physicians and
the medical community
Hefner, Hugh, 60, 65
HIV/AIDS, 169
Hoagland, Hudson, 23–24
Homosexuality, 59, 163 Hugh Moore Fund, 42
Humanae Vitae
(papal encyclical), 125–126
Identity, sexual, 146–147, 163 Implants for men, 113–114 Impotence, 68
India
mandatory family planning, 51 population conference, 35–36 search for effective male
contraceptives, 96–97
Infertility research, 14 Injections for men, 94 Injections for women, 136–137
International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), 41
Internet survey and research, 145, 147–148, 152, 164
In vitro fertilization, 23
IPD (intrapenile device), spoof, 103–104
IUD (intra-uterine device), 53, 55, 103, 131–132, 162, 169
Jockstrap as contraception, 105–106
John XXIII, 123–124
Johnson, Joyce, 59 Johnson, Lyndon B., 43 Johnson, Virginia, 61
Kelsey, Frances Oldham, 111, 127–128
Kennedy, John F., 53–54, 119, 128
Keyes, Allan, 54
Kistner, Robert, 57, 68
Ladies Home Journal,
45–46, 68,
130
Legal issues, 118, 139–140
Lesbians, 146–147, 163
Leyhausen, Paul, 46
Liability, 140
Liberal views, 80–81 Liberation, sexual
Beat generation, 59–60 benefits of the pill, 57–58
Playboy
philosophy, 60–67
sexual satisfaction, 12–14
See also
Sexual revolution Libido
dominating discourse on male contraceptive, 99–101,
107–110
pill use lowering, 147–149
Life
magazine, 44–45, 104–105
Long-term safety, 34
Lopez, Steve, 138
Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), 108
Lynn, Loretta, 12–13
Lysistrata Day, 45
Mad Men
(television series), 79 Magic bullet, 3
Marker, Russell, 24 Marriage
impact of the pill within, 79–80
premarital sex failing to lead to, 84–85
women’s liberation from, 16 WWII discourse on, 76
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 21, 24
Masters, William, 61
May, Rollo, 67–68
McCarthy, Joseph, 42
McCarthy, Mary, 77–78
McCormick, Katharine Dexter, 3–4, 7, 170
background of, 21–22
death of, 34
difficulty in finding research subjects, 27
early research testing, 29 motivation for activism, 14–15 on male contraceptives, 97–98 Pincus and, 24–25
population control movement, 38–39
Sanger’s collaboration with, 23 women’s rights activism, 17
McCormick, Stanley, 21–22 Media
anticommunist efforts and population control, 42–43
movie industry portrayal of the pill, 89–91
Norplant and Depo Provera, 138
Puerto Rican trials, 31
sexual revolution, 80–82, 86–87
vasectomy coverage, 100–102 Zero Population Growth
movement, 44–45
Men
Black Power movement and the pill, 49
negative side effects of the pill, 67–71
Playboy
philosophy, 60–67 response to the pill, 6 sexual liberation, 59
sexual revolution, 80–82 Men, contraceptives for
benefits of, 114–115
condoms, 4, 100, 146, 150–151,
161
injections, 108–109
jockstrap, 105–106
men’s growing acceptance of, 112
men’s refusals to accept risks of, 102–104
physiological obstacles to, 109–110
psychological obstacles to, 99–100
research efforts, 93–97, 101–103
sperm switch, 104–105
subcutaneous capsule, 113–114
testes heater, 106–107
vaccine, 107–108
vasectomy, 94, 100–101, 105,
110
women’s frustration over the lack of, 98–99
women’s groups’ advocacy for, 135
Menstrual irregularity, 4–5,
155–157
Mentally ill individuals, forced testing on, 27–28, 95
Merrell, Inc., 127–128 Mexico City policy, 54 Miltown, 126–127
Momism, 61–62
Moore, Hugh, 35, 42 Moral issues
choice increasing public acceptance of unmarried sex, 74
Comstock Law, 16, 18–20 critics of the pill, 3
Mormons, 15
Morning-after pill, 164–166 Morning-after use of the pill,
83
Movie industry, 89–91
Myths and misconceptions about the pill, 14
NAACP, 49
The Nation,
50, 119, 121 National security, birth control as,
40
Natural birth control
Fertility Awareness Method, 161–162
rhythm method of contraception, 65, 86,
121–123, 126, 161–162
withdrawal method, 4, 15
Negro Project, 48–49
Nelson, Gaylord, 132
New Deal, 19–20
New York Times,
108, 110, 168 Noncontraceptive benefits of the
pill, 155–158
Norplant, 136–137, 139–140,
154, 169
Notestein, Frank, 51
Nuclear family, 3, 37
Obama, Barack, 55, 164 Objectification of women,
61–62
O’Brien, John A., 121 Oneida Perfectionists, 15 Ortho Tri-Cyclin Lo, 147
Our Bodies, Ourselves
(BWHBC), 134–136
Overpopulation
controversy over the pill’s use for, 37–38
Ehrlich’s
Population Bomb,
44 history of population control,
38–39
Playboy
’s criticism of the Catholic Church abortion stance, 65–66
population control movement, 38–41
postwar international implications of contraception, 40–41
racism tingeing discourse, 46–47
the pill as the solution to, 2, 13–14, 35–38, 167–168
Zero Population Growth movement, 44–45
See also
Population control movement
Parental support of contraceptive use, 153–154
Patch, 169
Paul VI, 124–125
Pessaries, 15
Philadelphia Inquirer, 138 Physicians and the medical
community as third party, 5
college women’s access to the pill, 87–88
The Doctors’ Case Against the Pill,
130–132
laws restricting contraceptive distribution and use, 118
public dissent against, 126–127
Senate hearings, 132–133 single women’s exclusion from
contraceptives, 72–73
Pickup on 101
(film), 90
The Pill Versus the Springhill Mine Disaster
(Brautigan), 59–60
Pincus, Gregory background, 23
FDA approval process, 8, 33–34
involuntary testing of psychiatric patients, 27–28
male contraceptive, 95, 99 pill as infertility cure, 14 Puerto Rican trials, 29–31 Sanger and McCormick’s
connection to, 24–25
side effects of the pill, 98, 129 Pius XI, 123
Pius XII, 123
Plan B, 164–166
Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA), 22, 24,
39–40
Playboy Foundation, 61
Playboy
magazine, 60–67, 83
Popular culture, 89–91
Population and People
(Stockwell), 43–44
The Population Bomb
(Ehrlich), 44
The Population Bomb
(pamphlet), 42
Population control movement anticommunist efforts and,
41–43
birth control movement and, 38–41
personal and political ambivalence over, 48–51
pill’s minor role in curbing growth, 53–54
See also
Overpopulation Population Council, 41, 51–52,
137
Population statistics.
See
Statistical information Pornography, contraception as, 16 Poverty
anticommunism approach to population control, 42
choice and coercion in birth control, 48–49
Ehrlich’s
Population Bomb,
44 eugenics, 20–21
Norplant use with poor women, 138–139
personal and political ambivalence over international birth control, 50–51
Puerto Rican research tests, 29–30
the pill as the solution to, 2, 36 Pregnancy, thalidomide use
during, 127–128
Prelinger, Ernst, 83 Premarital sex
age and marital status of pill users, 152
benefits of the pill, 58–59 college girls’ ambivalence over
the sexual revolution, 84–89
Premarital sex (
continued
) concerns over the pill
increasing incidence of, 7–8 conservative values, 150
history of, 75
1960s increase in, 80–81 public opinion on, 80
sexual revolution and the pill, 71–73, 84–89
Preven, 165
Prisoners, testing on, 95–96 Progesterone, 14, 24
Progestin, 14, 24–25
Promiscuity, 152–153
Prudence and the Pill
(film), 90–91
Psychiatric patients, testing on, 27–28, 95
Psychological effects of female contraceptive, 154–155
Psychological effects of male contraceptive, 99
Public discussion of sex, 75 Public policy agenda
China’s one-child-per-couple policy, 51
conservatives targeting international aid, 53–55
developing countries, 51–53 Johnson administration
funding domestic family planning programs, 43
laws restricting use and distribution of contraceptives, 118–119
population control and birth control, 39–41
Puerto Rico, 29–30
Reagan, Ronald, 54
Rebound effect, 29
Regulatory process, 32–33
Reik, Theodor, 62–63
Reiss, Ira, 82 Religious values
birth control in religious communities, 15
conscience clauses, 163–164
morning-after pill, 165 premarital sex despite,
150–151
women’s defiance of religious authorities, 118
See also
Catholic Church Reproductive freedom, 145–146 Reproductive Study Center,
Brookline, Massachusetts, 25–26
Research, contraceptive
FDA approval process, 32–34 implants for men, 113–114 injections for men, 108–109 litigation hampering, 140
McCormick funding, 22,
24–25
physiological and psychological obstacles to a male contraceptive, 109–112
Pincus’s contribution to, 23–24
potential study sites, 29 Puerto Rican trials, 29–31 Rock’s role in, 25–27 sluggish pace of men’s
contraception research, 101–102, 105–106
vaccine for men, 107–108
Viagra and, 116
women’s groups’ advocacy for, 135
Responsibility for pill use, 157–159
Rhythm method of contraception, 65, 86, 121–123, 126,
161–162
Rice-Wray, Edris, 30–31
Rock, John, 1
background, 25–27 Catholic Church’s stance on
family planning, 122–123,
126
FDA approval process, 8, 33–34
jockstrap as contraceptive device, 106
pill as infertility cure, 14 premarital sex and the pill, 81 Puerto Rican trials, 29–31 women’s anger over side
effects, 98
Rockefeller III, John D., 41 Rockefeller Foundation, 51
Roosevelt, Franklin, 19–20
Roth, Philip, 77–78, 89–90
Safety concerns
FDA approval, 33–34 increasing safety over time,
143–144, 168
thalidomide, 127–128
See also
Side effects Sahl, Mort, 62
Sanger, Margaret, 3–4, 7, 170 choice and coercion in birth
control, 48–49
death of, 34 International Planned
Parenthood Federation, 41
McCormick and, 21–22 motivation for activism, 14–15 national security through birth
control, 40
on male contraceptives, 97–98 Pincus and, 23–25
population control advocacy, 20, 38–39
spiritual power of intimacy and sex, 75–76