Conclusion. Six. Stargazing on the Rue Morgue ; Two. Averse from swerving in "The mystery of Marie RogĂȘt" ; Three. An unusual gaping in the joints: delivering the purloined letter -- Part II. Nation, plantation, annihilation: three by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Four. Passwords and countersigns: The scarlet letter ; Five. Alleged necromancies within a system: The house of the seven gables -- Six. The Blithedale romance and abortion's conditional perfect -- Conclusion.
Summary:
"Antebellum America saw a great upsurge in abortion, driven in part by the rise of the pharmaceutical industry. Unsurprisingly, the practice became increasingly visible in the popular culture and literature of the era, appearing openly in advertisements, popular fiction, and newspaper reports. One figure would come to dominate national headlines from the 1840s onward: Madame Restell. Facing public condemnation and mob attacks at her home for her dogged support of women's reproductive rights, Restell built an empire selling her powders, pills, and services along the Eastern Seaboard. Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne undoubtedly knew of Restell's work and would go on to depict the incompatibility of abortion and nationalism in their writings. Through the thwarted plotlines, genealogical interruptions, and terminated ideas of Poe's Dupin trilogy and Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, The House of Seven Gables, and The Blithedale Romance, these authors consider new concepts around race, reproduction, and American exceptionalism. Dana Medoro demonstrates that their work can be usefully read in the context of debates on fetal life and personhood that circulated in the era"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Becoming modern: studies in the long nineteenth century
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