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At the crux of health disparities for women of color lies a history of maltreatment
based on racial difference from their white counterparts. It is their non-whiteness
that limits their access to the ideologies of “woman” and “femininity” within dominant
culture. As the result of this difference, the impact of the birth control movement
varied among women based on race. This project explores how the ideology attributed
to the black female body limited black women’s access to “womanhood” within dominant
culture, and analyzes the manners in which their reproductive autonomy was compromised
as the result of changes to that ideology through time. This project operates under
the hypothesis that black women’s access to certain aspects of femininity such as
domesticity and motherhood reflected their roles in slave society, that black women’s
reproductive value was based on the value of black children within slave culture,
and that both of these factors dictated the manner in which their reproductive autonomy
was managed by health professionals. Black people’s worth as a free labor force within
dominant culture diminished when the Reconstruction Amendments were added to the constitution
and slavery was deemed unconstitutional—resulting in the paradigmatic shift from the
promotion of black fertility to its recession. America’s transition to the medicosocial
regulation of black fertility through Eugenics, the role of the black elite in the
movement, and the negative impact of this agenda on the reproductive autonomy of black
women from low socioeconomic backgrounds are enlisted as support. The paper goes on
to draw connections between post-slavery ideology of black femininity and modern-day
medicosocial occurrences within clinical settings in order to advocate for increased
bias training for medical professionals as a means of combating current health disparities.
It concludes with the possibility that this improvement in medical training could
persuade people of color to seek out medical intervention at earlier stages of illness
and obtain regular check-ups by actively countering physicians’ past transgressions
against them.
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