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Politics | 05/31/2009 11:00 pm

Pro-Life Feminism Births a Great – and Inexhaustible – Debate

The rise of ‘pro-life feminism’ raises endless questions on the real meaning of the F word.
By Andrew Belonsky
© Getty Images

There was a time when right-leaning groups decried the proverbial “specter” of feminism. But now, 40 years after Gloria Steinem broke onto the feminist scene, an entirely different group of women are reclaiming the F word: “the pro-life feminists.” These women claim that the better-known feminists have perverted the term and, as a consequence, glorified abortion. Opponents of “pro-life feminism,” meanwhile, have equally harsh words for the movement – and its moniker.

“[Pro-life feminism] is a bit of an oxymoron,” says Ellen Malcolm, the IBM heiress who founded Emily’s List, a political machine designed to elect pro-choice female lawmakers. “To say that women should be able to make decisions about their own lives, except when it comes to their bodies — that seems contradictory to me.”

True, it’s hard for some people to comprehend the pro-life feminist camp, but that doesn’t make them any less real. In fact, many of its adherents claim the movement started far before the first woman burned her bra. It can be traced, they say, back to the legendary suffragette, Susan B. Anthony.

Two Steps Back, One Step Forward?

On July 8, 1869, a paper called The Revolution, which was founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Anthony, published an article entitled “Marriage and Maternity,” in which the author, known only as "A," describes abortion as “child murder.” The act is not simply a sin, it’s a symptom of the “noxious weed” that is patriarchal domination:

Women are educated to think that with marriage their individuality ceases or is transferred to their husbands. The wife has thenceforth no right over her own body. This is also the husband’s belief, and upon which he acts … It is clear to my mind that this evil wholly arises from the false position which woman occupies in civilized society.

Anthony had in fact spoken out against abortion – as exhibited in her oft-quoted speech, “Social Purity,” which equates abortion with infanticide – but Salon’s Tracy Clark-Flory points out that there’s no direct evidence to prove Anthony indeed wrote this piece. Regardless of the identity of "A," today’s pro-life feminists often invoke Anthony’s name in their crusade against abortion.

In 1992, former Heritage Foundation staff member Marjorie Dannenfelser founded a group called the Susan B. Anthony List as "an answer to Emily’s List." "It was very clear to me that if we wanted to have pro-life women in public office we were going to have to build a political machine to make that happen," explained Dannenfelser. While Dannenfelser’s group, which boasts a membership of 158,000, works mostly with Republicans – they gave $234,002 to 35 candidates during the last election cycle – the Susan B. Anthony List describes itself as nonpartisan and has in the past worked with a handful of Democrats, including late Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. Catherine Baker-Knoll. Though the group claims it’s working to “advance the role of pro-life women in the political process,” the List does at times help men who have opposed pro-choice women.

Some, of course, could argue that funding men over women undermines their female-centric mission, but Dannenfelser disagrees: “I believe that the life issue so undermines women … I couldn’t, in good conscience, support a woman that I thought was undermining the health, welfare and happiness of other women, because that is truly how I see it.” Ellen Malcolm, the founder of Emily’s List, sees their approach quite differently: “They want to keep progressive women out of Congress and elected office, and I think they have a very Republican Conservative agenda.”

While Dannenfelser, who grew up Episcopalian and points out that she was once pro-choice, insists she’s turned off by the violence inherent in abortion, another pro-life activist, Jenn Giroux, and her “Women Influencing the Nation” approach the argument with more piety.

317 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Slinky Binx

  You are entitled to your opinion, and so am I.  Your statement is completely shocking and offensive.  Seriously, I’m speechless, and it’s way over the line.  

By Slinky Binx on 06/01/2009 2:40 pm
Kelly In Texas

How cowardly it is to attempt to tie pro lifers with a crazy lunatic that shoots ANYONE. Bill OReilly? Are you people serious? He has nothing to do with this murder.

Mentally disturbed people get their ideas from many places…movies (Taxi) books (Catcher in the Rye)…mainly from the voices in the heads….

It is beyond LAME to drag other journalist or activists into this horrible act by a disturbed and misguided individual. And you all know it.

However, Dr. Tiller knew that what he did was a danger to himself. He had to have protection and bullet proof glass…he accepted that danger and knew what might happen. He gave his life for what he believed in…He had a choice to stop, he chose to continue and thereby accepted the danger inherant in that decision.

Your dishonorable attempt to draw innocent people into the horrible act of one individual, shows just how intolerant and unfair your position really is.

By Kelly In Texas on 06/01/2009 6:03 pm
R.J.B. Reed
This is a perfect example of how religous extremism promotes terrorism.
By R.J.B. Reed on 06/01/2009 11:30 am
Kelly In Texas

RJB….absolutely not true….The shooter was "anti-everything" according to his family. He was mentally ill and has nothing to do with pro lifers or religious people.

He was mentally ill…get that?

The perfect example of how religous extremism promotes terrorism is the Taliban. Try learning about Ahmadinejad and the 12th Imam…try something legitimate that really does effect us all.

By Kelly In Texas on 06/01/2009 6:20 pm
R.J.B. Reed
My post was in reference to HA BIBI’s religously motivated tirade that it was good for this man to be murdered.  It was not in reference to the shooter.  Perhaps you should look at the thread structure before jumping in.
By R.J.B. Reed on 06/01/2009 9:14 pm
S G
Agreed R.J.B.
By S G on 06/02/2009 7:15 am
Amanda C
killing is not right in any manner.
By Amanda C on 06/01/2009 4:41 pm
Kathy Dyke
my my my, that is such a simple way to look at this. You really can’t be serious and think the two are the same. A Woman gave her consent for the procedure that went on in HER womb. As gruesome a procedure as it is, it is still our right to choose. Anybody who even sarcastically can relate the two boggles my mind. A hateful crime in God’s name, done in a church that represents God, do you not see the hypocrisy in this?
By Kathy Dyke on 06/01/2009 7:24 pm
C jay

Murder is murder in the U.S. according to law. Crossing lines on your own, only creates more violence, so work diligently to change the laws here, and try hard to stop inflaming speech, please. Our nation has a shocking black stain for torture, and violence now, around the world. We may not longer require China to step up and do better than we do, can we!

 

By C jay on 06/02/2009 12:42 am
EKA -

"the same bullet that killed George Tiller also shattered the moral underpinnings of the movement that inspired its firing."

DeB, I don’t think it will make any difference, I think the rabid "Life" movement will see it as justified and will, maybe secretly, rejoice at the murder. It seems that the murderer also believed in UFOs and government conspiracies - real lunatic fringe !

 

By EKA - on 06/01/2009 10:44 am
HA BIBI
Oh, you think it was Suzanne? LOL!
By HA BIBI on 06/01/2009 10:51 am
Kelly In Texas
EKA….your comments are indefensible. To say that an entire group of people is "secretly rejoicing" is sick. But then, liberals rarely deal with reality…..
By Kelly In Texas on 06/01/2009 6:07 pm
EKA -

I said the RABID life movement …… not the entire life movement, and I stand by my statement.

You say "liberals rarely deal with reality" , well, the murder of an abortion provider is about as real as you can get 

By EKA - on 06/01/2009 7:30 pm
Marjorie C.

S G:  time for bill’s judgement day

Having a problem with Bill today, are we?

 

By Marjorie C. on 06/01/2009 10:35 am
S G
I have a problem with anyone who promotes hate and violence.
By S G on 06/01/2009 10:52 am