Le droit à l'avortement by Séverine
(5 User reviews)
370
Séverine, 1855-1929
French
"Le droit à l'avortement by Séverine" is a polemical journalistic essay written in the late 19th century. It challenges the legal and moral order of its time, arguing for women’s right to end a pregnancy and denouncing social hypocrisy around sexuality, motherhood, and the state’s demands for population growth. The piece opens on the “Toulon scanda...
authorities rather than a quest for justice. From there, it presses a broader case: questioning where abortion “begins,” exposing the law’s inconsistencies, and asserting that before birth there is only the woman, whose life and conscience must prevail. It rebuts demographic alarms by showing how society abandons large families, citing a skilled worker with many children refused housing, and argues that many working women choose abortion out of maternal love to protect the children they already have; others act to shield their families from disgrace or, in the case of sex workers, to survive and to spare future children hardship. Dismissing the stereotype of vain “coquettes,” it notes that most women are driven by necessity, not vanity. The essay portrays abortion as a misfortune rather than a crime, honors the courage of women who risk their health, and concludes that punitive laws and a callous social order create the very conditions that force such decisions—making the law, not women, the true culprit. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Lisa Baker
1 month agoAfter looking for this everywhere, the plot twists are genuinely surprising without feeling cheap or forced. A solid resource I will return to often.
Oliver Sanchez
1 month agoCompared to other books on this topic, it challenges the reader's perspective in the most intellectual way. Simply brilliant.
Jennifer Gonzalez
3 months agoAs someone who reads a lot, the logical flow of arguments makes it an essential resource for research. It was exactly what I needed right now.
Paul Williams
3 months agoIn my opinion, the formatting of this PDF is flawless and easy to read on any device. Truly inspiring.
There are no comments for this eBook.
Betty Jackson
1 month agoFor a digital edition, the translation seems very fluid and captures the original nuance perfectly. It was exactly what I needed right now.