Universität Wien

124265 KO Critical Media Analysis (2025W)

Marie Stopes' 1920s Birth Control Campaign in Britain: Contraception, Feminism, and Eugenics

6.00 ECTS (2.00 SWS), SPL 12 - Anglistik
Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung

An/Abmeldung

Hinweis: Ihr Anmeldezeitpunkt innerhalb der Frist hat keine Auswirkungen auf die Platzvergabe (kein "first come, first served").

Details

max. 30 Teilnehmer*innen
Sprache: Englisch

Lehrende

Termine (iCal) - nächster Termin ist mit N markiert

On Thursday 27. November, we will undertake a group visit to the Museum of Contraception and Abortion in Vienna. The final essay for this course is based on the museum visit. If you cannot attend this session, you must visit the museum in your own time in order to be able to complete the assignment.

  • Freitag 21.11. 08:00 - 11:15 Seminarraum 6 UniCampus Hof 7 Eingang 7.1 OG01 2H-O1-33
  • Montag 24.11. 08:00 - 09:30 Seminarraum 6 UniCampus Hof 7 Eingang 7.1 OG01 2H-O1-33
  • Mittwoch 26.11. 15:00 - 20:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Donnerstag 27.11. 10:00 - 11:30 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Donnerstag 27.11. 11:30 - 15:00 Ort in u:find Details
  • Freitag 28.11. 08:00 - 13:00 Seminarraum 10, Kolingasse 14-16, OG01

Information

Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung

"You can imagine my horror when I felt a movement in the body …", wrote one mother to the British birth control advocate Marie Stopes in 1926, describing the internal sensation of quickening that confirmed to her that she was pregnant. Her letter lies within an archive of correspondence in which people from all over the UK told Stopes of their experiences of sexuality, maternity, and healthcare. Many letters from poor and working-class mothers lament birth injuries that had led to chronic pain and disability, and describe undernourished and sickly children, too numerous for the family to raise. A common complaint is that doctors and nurses advise strictly NO MORE PREGNANCIES but withhold information about how this might be achieved. Most letters end with pleas to Stopes for advice and for access to modern contraceptives.

When Stopes published the bestselling sex and marriage guide "Married Love" in 1918, the general population in Britain had little anatomical knowledge or sexual education. Contraception was difficult to access and a taboo topic. Criminalised abortion bore the risk of injury and death. Dr Marie Stopes (1880–1958), an upper-middle class woman scientist, wanted to improve the situations of women and their families by destigmatizing contraception and making it widely available. She was also committed to eugenics, a now discredited, pseudo-scientific theory that human populations can be genetically and morally improved if only the ‘fit’ members of society have children.

This course introduces you to the discourses of sex, contraception, and eugenics in 1920s Britain, when the wide introduction of modern contraceptives would literally change people’s lives, especially those with uteruses. We will consider Stopes’ feminism and eugenics in the context of increasing racialisation, the new science of demographics, and anxieties around the strength of the Empire.

You will gain an understanding of the political theories of biopolitics and necropolitics in their applications to the politics of (reproductive) healthcare on a population scale. As theorized by Michel Foucault, the regime of biopolitics is aimed at administering, optimising and multiplying life and all its processes; it describes the form of management at the root of modern governmentality (Foucault 1976: 137). The state’s practices of regulation, or biopower, are directed towards the individual body, which contains “the mechanics of life” (ibid, 1939).

This course will:
- familiarise you with transdisciplinary research
- employ object-led and research-led teaching
- emphasise historical artefacts and imagery
- introduce you to primary sources from the 1920s, such as letters and pamphlets
- develop your critical analysis skills in relation to the complex and contested topic of reproductive healthcare
- develop your understanding of modernity in Britain, especially with regard to women’s lives, health, sexuality, and feminisms
- develop your understanding of eugenics historically, as well as sensitising you to its ideologies as they resurface today
- develop your discussion, critical thinking and writing skills

*Please note the emotive and/or politically charged nature of topics that will be raised in this course as per the above description. While they are not the focus of the course, partner abuse, rape, miscarriage, and child loss will come up in readings and discussion. Participants in this course are asked to treat these topics and each other with care and respect.*

Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel

Students are expected to prepare tasks, read and prepare the assigned texts, participate actively in class, hand in written assignments on time, work in groups and present the outcomes to the class. The assignments are to write a glossary entry, to work as a group to present one assigned text to the rest of the class, and to write a 2,000 word essay (see detailed information on Moodle. The assignments will also be explained in the first session). Active class participation is assessed with up to 10 points.

Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab

Regular attendance (a maximum of two absences is possible) and active participation in classroom discussion and group work; regular preparation of assigned reading material; written tasks and presentation.

Students must fulfil and pass each of the 4 course requirements: regular attendance and participation (10 points), glossary entry (20 points), group presentation (20 points), final essay (50 points) and score at least 60 points altogether in order to pass this course.

Grading scale:
1: 100-90 points
2: 89-80 points
3: 79-70 points
4: 69-60 points
5: 59-0 points

The course requirements will be discussed in detail during the first session.

Prüfungsstoff

Contents covered throughout the course, including the musuem visit.

Literatur

Foucault, Michel. The Will to Knowledge: The History of Sexuality Volume 1. Translated by R. Hurley (New York: Pantheon Books, 1976).

Hall, Lesley. ‘Heterosexuality, Marriage and Sex Manuals’. In Sexology Uncensored : The Documents of Sexual Science, edited by Lucy Bland and Laura Doan. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1998.

Hall, Ruth, ed. Dear Dr. Stopes: Sex in the 1920s. London: Andre Deutsch, 1978.

Heidorn, Nora. 'Touching matters of care: A visual approach to the care and violence in Dr Marie Stopes' birth control campaign'. In: Violence, care, cure. Self/perceptions within the medical encounter, edited by Marta-Laura Cenedese and Clio Nicastro, 27 – 46. Routledge, 2025.

Levine, Philippa. ‘Imperial Encounters’. In Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day, edited by Nick Hopwood, Rebecca Flemming, and Lauren Kassell, 1st ed., 361–74. Cambridge University Press, 2018.

Mills, Catherine. ‘Biopolitics and Human Reproduction’. In The Routledge Handbook of Biopolitics, edited by Sergei Prozorov and Simona Rentea, 1st Edition., 281–94. Routledge, 2017.

Murphy, Michelle. ‘Unsettling Care: Troubling Transnational Itineraries of Care in Feminist Health Practices’. Social Studies of Science 45, no. 5 (October 2015): 717–37.

Neushul, Peter. ‘Marie C. Stopes and the Popularization of Birth Control Technology’. Technology and Culture 39, no. 2 (April 1998): 245.

Stopes, Marie Carmichael. ‘Wise Parenthood (1918)’. In Marie Stopes: Feminist, Eroticist, Eugenicist: Essential Writings, edited by William Garrett. San Francisco: Kenon Books, 2007.

Wazana Tompkins, Kyla. ‘Biopower’. In Keywords for Gender and Sexuality Studies, edited by The Keywords Feminist Editorial Collective, New York: New York University Press, pp. 29-34.

Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis

Studium: BA 612, BEd 046/407
Code/Modul: BA07.3; BEd 08a.2, BEd 08b.1
Lehrinhalt: 12-4260

Letzte Änderung: Di 18.11.2025 11:46