1st Edition

Birth Control in Nineteenth-Century England

By Angus McLaren Copyright 1978
266 Pages
by Routledge

266 Pages
by Routledge

266 Pages
by Routledge

The decline of the British birth rate was arguably the most important social change to occur in the last decades of the nineteenth century, but historians have shown remarkably little interest in the phenomenon. Most of the work done on the question has been by sociologists and reflects their assumption that the progressive adoption of birth control was largely a matter of the lower classes aping... Read more

Preface.  Introduction.  Part 1: Background to the Birth Control Debate  1. Quackery and Control of Fertility in Eighteenth-Century England  Part 2: Contraception and the Class Struggle  2. The Beginning of the Birth Control Debate  3. Contraception and Working-Class Movements  4. Birth Control and Medical Self-help  5. Birth Control and the Morality of Married Life  Part 3: Neo-Malthusianism and its Late Nineteenth-Century Critics  6. The Malthusian League  7. Birth Control and the British Medical Profession, 1850-1914  8. Birth Control and Eugenics  9. Socialists and Birth Control: the Case of the Social Democratic Federation  10. Socialists and Birth Control: Freedom or Efficiency  11. Feminism and Fertility Control  Part 4: Theory and Practice  12. Birth Control and the Working Classes  13. Abortion in England, 1890-1914.  Conclusion.  Index.

Biography

Angus McLaren