Featured Event

Dangerous Pregnancies: German Measles, Disabilities, and Abortion

Leslie Reagan, Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois

January 25, 2010, 4:30 p.m. Sterling Hall of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, Fulton Room, L-215, (tea will be served at 4:00 p.m., all are welcome).
Sponsored by the Program in the History of Science and Medicine

This talk will draw from the author’s forthcoming book Dangerous Pregnancies: Mothers, Disabilities, and Abortion in Modern America, which is scheduled for release in mid-February 2010.

About the Book

Dangerous Pregnancies tells the largely forgotten story of the German measles epidemic of the early 1960s and how it created national anxiety about dying, disabled, and "dangerous" babies. This epidemic would ultimately transform abortion politics, produce new science, and help build two of the most enduring social movements of the late twentieth century--the reproductive rights and the disability rights movements. At most a minor rash and fever for women, German measles (also known as rubella), if contracted during pregnancy, could result in miscarriages, infant deaths, and serious birth defects in the newborn.

Award-winning writer Leslie J. Reagan chronicles for the first time the discoveries and dilemmas of this disease in a book full of intimate stories--including riveting courtroom testimony, secret investigations of women and doctors for abortion, and startling media portraits of children with disabilities. In exploring a disease that changed America, Dangerous Pregnancies powerfully illuminates social movements and the changes that still shape individual lives, pregnancy, medicine, law, and politics.

In exploring a disease that changed America, Dangerous Pregnancies powerfully illuminates social movements and the changes that still shape individual lives, pregnancy, medicine, law, and politics.

"Compellingly attentive to medical and legal structures, but also to dramatic human choices, Dangerous Pregnancies provides a boldly argued and carefully documented historical grounding for critical debates in public policy and women's rights."  
--David Roediger, author ofHow Race Survived U.S. History

"Both a gripping story of the activism of middle-class mothers and an insightful study of abortion law reform, Dangerous Pregnancies is a compelling argument about reproductive rights, immunization, and the public health power of the state. A terrific book."   
--Molly Ladd-Taylor, author of "Bad" Mothers: Politics 
of Blame in Twentieth-Century America
andMother-Work:
Women, Child Welfare, and 
the State, 1890-1930.

"Accessible and clearly written, Reagan's illuminating account of German measles is immensely valuable both in itself and as a window into larger issues of gender, public health, and bioethics."  
--Charles Rosenberg, author of The Cholera Years
andNo Other Gods: On Science and American Social Thought

About the Author

Leslie J. Reagan is Associate Professor of History and Medicine with affiliations in Gender and Women's Studies and Law at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of When Abortion Was a Crime: Women, Medicine, and Law in the United States 1867-1973 (UC Press) and coeditor of Medicine's Moving Pictures: Medicine, Health, and Bodies in American Film and Television.