Introduction
Chapter 1: A Clash of Values
Chapter 2: The Political Fight Begins
Chapter 3: Initial Losses
Chapter 4: National Right to Life
Chapter 5: "Abortion on Demand"
Chapter 6: A New Image
Chapter 7: Progressive Politics
Chapter 8: National Battle
Chapter 9: After Roe
Epilogue
Notes
Index
Daniel K. Williams is Associate Professor of History at the University of West Georgia. He is author of God's Own Party: The Making of the Christian Right.
"[Williams] rightly and convincingly argues that historians of
abortion and reproductive politics in the U.S. have not paid
significant attention to the activists who resisted legalization.
As a result, the book will be important to historians working to
achieve a full understanding of the ongoing legislative
controversies over elective abortion."--The Catholic Historical
Review
"[M]ust-read for any person--pro-choice or pro-life--who is
interested in the abortion issue."--National Catholic Register
"This book provides a thoroughly researched and engagingly written
history of the pro-life movement in the United States from roughly
1930 to the present..."--Reading Religion
"Williams provides a valuable, granular account of the politics of
abortion, especially the legislative debates before Roe, and he
offers an important reframing of the history."--Christian
Century
"This is a superb book on a chapter of history that has, until now,
largely eluded modern historians Williams has produced a thoroughly
researched and wellwritten chronicle of how pro-life Catholic
Democrats fought the movement toward permissive abortion laws and
how the pro-life position evolved to include not only Catholics but
also evangelical Protestants by the end of the 1960s Williams's
account of state and local and national figures in the abortion
movement makes Defenders of the Unborn an excellent addition to the
literature on abortion politics in America."--Kansas History: A
Journal of the Central Plains
"A deeply researched, evenhanded, accessible and surprising history
of anti-abortion before Roe v. Wade."--New York Times Book
Review
"Masterful...[A] meticulous reconstruction of a historical moment
that we think we know but don't."--Christianity Today
"There's a lot here that will surprise even those who stay current
with the battle over reproductive rights."--Publishers Weekly
"Daniel Williams recasts the history of the pro-life movement,
showing that it is not simply a backlash against women's rights,
the sexual revolution, or Roe v. Wade. He challenges popular
opinion and scholarship on the anti-abortion movement in truly
original ways that should recast our thinking about the politics of
abortion, social issues, and social movements in modern
America."--Donald T. Critchlow, author of Intended Consequences:
Abortion, Family
Planning, and Federal Policy
"Daniel Williams' splendid book Defenders of the Unborn explodes
many common myths about the history of the pro-life movement and
provides the first detailed and accurate history of the cause.
Anyone who wonders how the movement emerged, why it has persisted,
and whether it is likely to continue to grow in numbers and
influence needs to read this book."--Robert P. George, McCormick
Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University
"Daniel Williams' compelling book upends conventional ideas about
the origins and ambitions of the pro-life movement. Using an
impressive variety of sources, Defenders of the Unborn establishes
that the identification of pro-life activism and conservatism was
not inevitable, and illuminates how successful and savvy pro-lifers
were in the decades before Roe v. Wade. Williams' important and
original contribution to the history of abortion
politics offers reason to rethink today's debate."--Mary Ziegler,
Stearns Weaver Miller Professor of Law, Florida State University
College of Law
"This book provides a thoroughly researched and engagingly written
history of the pro-life movement in the United States from roughly
1930 to the present, though the center of gravity of the historical
treatment is the late 1960s and early 1970s. The author's main
contention, which he establishes convincingly, is that the pro-life
movement did not suddenly arise in the wake of Roe v. Wade. It
preexisted Roe and was in a pitched battle with the
pro-choice camp on a state-by-state basis for many years."--Reading
Religion
"Daniel Williams (author of Gods Own Party: The Making of the
Christian Right) has deployed his skills to reveal complexity and
contour in the history of abortion in the United States since the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Williams is adept at
unpacking the history of abortion in a way that may leave readers
looking for support for their side scratching their heads."--Fides
et Historia
"Daniel K. Williams has accomplished his goals. He has provided the
country and the church with a rich instructive account of a
momentous social struggle."--American Catholic Studies
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