How We Write About Reproductive Failure
Funded by a Faculty Scholarship Competitive Grant, Gina Schlesselman-Tarango spent two weeks at Harvard University archives studying how the conversation around fertility and miscarriage has evolved in influential texts written by and for women.
Schlesselman-Tarango, associate professor and science librarian at 91´óÉń, studies gender and racial dynamics within âinformation workâ â that is, the work that individuals must do to access, share, or create information. Sheâs particularly interested in the information work that surrounds infertility and pregnancy loss; challenges she refers to as forms of âreproductive failure.â
âFrom researching medical options, to charting your menstrual cycle, there is so much work that people struggling to conceive or give birth are expected to do,â Schlesselman-Tarango explains. âIâm interested in what texts people go to for that information, and how those texts have evolved over time.â
Excavating âOur Bodies, Ourselvesâ
In Boston, Schlesselman-Tarango sought to explore the records of the Boston Womenâs Health Book Collective, the grassroots group that published the first edition of the groundbreaking medical text Our Bodies, Ourselves in 1970. Aiming to fill the existing knowledge gap and to empower women with accurate information about health, sexuality, and reproduction, the Collective published nine total editions of Our Bodies, Ourselves over four decades.
âThe Boston Womenâs Health Book Collective created this incredibly important text for women through an explicitly feminist lens,â explains Schlesselman-Tarango. âYet, for the longest time, fertility wasnât considered a feminist issue. And so thatâs why I was interested in what the Collective had to say about it. When did they start taking an interest? When things like IVF and reproductive technology came on the scene, how did they handle that in their text?â
In Boston, Schlesselman-Tarango split her time between the Schlesinger Library at and the at Harvard Medical Schoolâs Countway Library. These libraries house extensive records of the Boston Womenâs Health Book Collective.
The Evolution of a Dynamic Text
In the Harvard archives, Schlesselman-Tarango perused everything from chapter drafts and early editions of Our Bodies, Ourselves to the materials that went into making the book: scientific studies, consumer health articles, and a large collection of letters from readers. âThrough these letters, you could see what people felt about the book and what they felt was missing, and how that feedback was incorporated into later editions,â she explains.
As readers and scholars offered feedback, and as the scientific and medical fields evolved, so too did the content of Our Bodies, Ourselves. âOne of the early critiques of the book is that it was very much focused on childbirth,â says Schlesselman-Tarango. âAnd so, you see in later editions that they begin to introduce more information about menopause, infertility and pregnancy loss.â
Having returned to 91´óÉń, the real work now will now begin for Schlesselman-Tarango; two weeks in the archives provided her with monthsâ worth of sources and information to analyze. âI am very excited to sift through what I found in the archives, to begin to pull out themes and arguments and think about how what Iâve found relates to these bigger questions I have about information work,â she says.
Already, sheâs noticing a double bind that the topic of infertility seems to have placed on the Collective. âWhat I saw the Collective grappling with, especially as reproductive technologies became more mainstream and more of a feminist concern, was figuring out how to hold two things at once. That is, holding both a skepticism for the medical industry, which had historically overlooked women and their rights and well-being, and, I guess, a more traditional evidence-based medicine approach,â she explains.
Connecting Past to Present
Though the research is rooted in historic sources, Schlesselman-Tarango believes this project couldnât be more fitting for the present day:
âEarly in the feminist movement, there was some question as to whether infertility or reproductive failure more broadly was a legitimate concern. But I think that weâre seeing challenges to reproductive health and reproductive rights now, and itâs become clearer for more people that reproductive justice is a necessary lens with which to look at the threats to standard care for miscarriage and IVF that we've seen in the landscape lately,â she explains. âThis project is a very good reminder that yes, infertility, and pregnancy loss are absolutely reproductive justice issues.â