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- Title
The Brave New Worlds of Birth Control: Women's Travel in Soviet Russia and Naomi Mitchison's We Have Been Warned.
- Authors
Chan, Julia
- Abstract
Reproductive autonomy has been one of the most prominent utopian fantasies of feminism. Yet while "birth control" promises women agency over their own bodies, it also appropriates it for state control. For many, this conundrum of birth control politics finds its dystopian double in the sexual revolution in the Soviet Union, where collectivism in reproduction questions the very idea of the autonomous subject. The feminist-socialist writer Naomi Mitchison, however, goes beyond this abstract understanding of female political subjectivity. Her novel We Have Been Warned (1935), inspired by her visit to the USSR, reconceptualizes even as it critiques utopia for women by focusing instead on the pain of their birthing and aborting bodies as the basis of solidarity, thereby constructing a new feminist aesthetics that reaffirms the embodied subject as the repository of revolutionary potentiality.
- Subjects
WE Have Been Warned (Book); MITCHISON, Naomi, 1897-1999; BIRTH control; ABORTION; WOMEN'S writings; 20TH century (Literary period); MODERNISM (Literary period)
- Publication
Journal of Modern Literature, 2019, Vol 42, Issue 2, p38
- ISSN
0022-281X
- Publication type
Literary Criticism
- DOI
10.2979/jmodelite.42.2.03