1st Edition

Resistant Reproductions Pregnancy and Abortion in British Literature and Film

By Fran Bigman Copyright 2024

    Resistant Reproductions asks why narratives of pregnancy and abortion emerged in the early twentieth century and what kinds of stories these narratives conveyed. Is it only once pregnancy becomes plannable that it becomes a story worth telling? Abortion is often considered resistant and feminist, while pregnancy is considered domestic and conventional. How can readings of literary narratives challenge this reductive binary?

    Resistant Reproductions, the first book-length study of both pregnancy and abortion in British culture, addresses these questions by examining pregnancy narratives, including abortion narratives, in British fiction and film from 1907 to 1967. Fiction became a way for writers to explore what new possibilities of reproductive control would mean for the individual, yet there was also much anxiety about who would have control: individuals or the state. While exploring intimate personal experiences of pregnancy and abortion, Resistant Reproductions also asks how literary narratives used reproductive plots to address political issues of gender, class, and eugenics.

    Introduction

    Chapter 1. Pregnancy as Protest: Speculative Fiction by WWI and Interwar Women Writers Beyond Brave New World

    Chapter 2. Blood and Pain and Ugliness: Abortion in the 1930s Writings of Naomi Mitchison

    Chapter 3. The Shattered Mould: Rosamond Lehmann and Abortion in 1930s Rhetoric and Fiction

    Chapter 4. A Bit of Himself: Male-Authored Abortion Narratives from Waste to Alfie

    Chapter 5. Bubble Baths for Brenda: Pregnancy and Abortion in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and ‘Angry Young Man’ narratives in Mid-Century British Novels and Film

    Chapter 6. Babies without Husbands: Unmarried Pregnancy in 1960s British Fiction

    Conclusion

    Works Cited

    Index

    Biography

    Fran Bigman is an independent academic who lives in New York City. She received her PhD and MPhil in English from the University of Cambridge and her BA in History from Brown University.