Ordinary Abortion
Reproductive Choice in Twenty-First-Century Women's Writing
Mary Thompson(Author)
Ohio State University Press
Will be published approx. on 21. July 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
190 pages
978-0-8142-5987-0 (ISBN)
Description
Considers the undramatic prevalence of abortion in the United States and how it has shaped twenty-first-century women's writing. The Supreme Court's Dobbs v. Jackson (2022) decision, which erased the constitutional right to abortion, abruptly redramatized access in the United States. Yet twenty-first-century literature written before Dobbs reflects a landscape in which abortion appears as an undramatic, routine part of women's lives. In Ordinary Abortion, Mary Thompson argues that many contemporary women writers depict abortion as a commonplace decision intertwined with health, education, career, sexuality, relationships, family-making, and motherhood. Drawing on American poetry, fiction, nonfiction, memoir, and dystopian writing, Ordinary Abortion examines how ideas about abortion circulate through literature and how literary forms, in turn, shape readers' understandings of reproduction and politics. Thompson traces new plots, characters, narrative strategies, and genres emerging around birth control, unplanned pregnancy, termination, and family formation. These works reveal renewed thematic attention to abortion's relationship with motherhood and mother-loss, neoliberal pressures, stratified reproduction, masculinity, violence, care work, and disability. Ultimately, Ordinary Abortion shows that abortion literature extends far beyond stories centered on crisis or choice. Instead, twenty-first-century women's writing reveals a quiet, pervasive truth: Abortion has long been woven into everyday American life, normalized in ways that public discourse has often failed to acknowledge.
More details
Language
English
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8142-5987-0 (9780814259870)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Mary Thompson is Professor of English at James Madison University. She is coeditor (with Modhumita Roy) of The Politics of Reproduction: Adoption, Abortion, and Surrogacy in the Age of Neoliberalism.