

The 19th century – unlike the 18th – saw a decrease in the trust in, and power of, women themselves.

By Dr. Maurizio Valsania
Professor of American History
Universitร di Torino
Introduction
Justice Samuel Alito appears spellbound by the 19th century.
In Dobbs v. Jackson Womenโs Health Organization, the decision Alito wrote overruling 50 years of constitutional protection for womenโs right to get an abortion, he deploys arguments that are based on several historical precedents. He uses the phrase โhistory and traditionโ regularly.
But for Alito, the 19th century looks like the true golden age: โIn 1803, the British Parliament made abortion a crime at all stages of pregnancy and authorized the imposition of severe punishment.โ
He goes on and on: โIn this country during the 19th century, the vast majority of the States enacted statutes criminalizing abortion at all stages of pregnancy.โ
โBy 1868, the year when the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified,โ Alito concludes, โthree-quarters of the States, 28 out of 37, had enacted statutes making abortion a crime.โ
But in his rather selective forays into history, Alito doesnโt ask what to me, as a historian, constitutes a set of fundamental questions: Why was abortion eventually criminalized during that time? What was the broad cultural and intellectual context of that period? And, more important, is there something peculiar about the 19th century?
As far as womenโs bodies and abortion are concerned, the 19th century saw a decrease in the trust in, and power of, women themselves.
18th-Century Women: Active and in Control

To begin with, 17th- and 18th-century legal authorities Edward Coke, Matthew Hale and William Blackstone had all advocated for or condoned abortion. They fretted only when the procedure was carried out after โquickening,โ the moment when the mother realizes that the fetus moves in her womb, approximately the fourth month of pregnancy.
As a medical procedure, abortion was widespread in Colonial and 18th-century America. By using more or less safe techniques, midwives and medical practitioners performed many types of operations on their patients. The woman could easily die, of course; but when she sought an abortion, no social, legal or religious force would have blocked her.
Also, a woman could choose from many available remedies rather than have an operation. Derived from juniper bushes, โsavin,โ or Juniperus sabina, was one of the most popular abortifacients. Other herbs and concoctions were similarly taken: pennyroyal, tansy, ergot, Seneca snakeroot or cotton root bark.
Benjamin Franklin inserted an abortion recipe in a popular textbook he republished in Philadelphia in 1748. He didnโt prompt any scandal.
The truth is that Americaโs founders, together with their contemporaries, had a rather democratic understanding of the female body. They believed that women, physiologically speaking, werenโt qualitatively different from men; the two sexes were equal and complementary.
Menโs and womenโs composition, medical doctors argued, was identical in essence โ the only difference was anatomical, in that male sexual organs were more externally distended than female organs.
Just like the male, the female was thought of as fully in control of the workings of her physiology, including her sexuality. It was believed that both the man and the woman had to reach orgasm, better if simultaneously, for pregnancy to ensue.
This made 18th-century men attentive to the satisfaction of their female partners, though for utilitarian reasons.
Especially when sex was aimed at procreation, the woman had to be as active as the male partner. The 18th-century woman was active and in control. She trusted her bodily feelings, including her pleasures.
And crucially, only she could detect whether quickening had taken place in her womb. Consequently, she could immediately tell whether terminating a pregnancy at a given time was acceptable. Or if it was a crime.
19th-Century Women: Weak and Chaste

The 19th century changed all that. The understanding of physiology and the mechanisms of the female body underwent a deep transformation. European and American doctors, now, saw women as essentially different from men: From a โone bodyโ model, the medical discourse shifted toward a โtwo bodyโ model.
Womenโs level of self-determination decreased accordingly. Suddenly, they were not only weaker or softer than men, but inherently passive, too. Instead of being encouraged to take part in sex, actively and with vigor, 19th-century women were expected to be withdrawn.
They were thus recast as pure, chaste and modest. Commendable women were virgins, wives, mothers. Or else they were prostitutes, nearly criminals, which reflects the Victorian dualistic mindset. Instead of being urged to trust the quickening and other physiological events happening in her womb or her vagina, the honest woman had to trust her doctor.
Anti-abortion campaigns began in earnest in the mid-19th century. They were waged mostly by the American Medical Association, founded in 1847, and were fundamentally anti-feminist. They chastised women for shunning the Victorian โself-sacrificeโ expected of mothers.
Anti-abortion campaigns were targeted against midwives and tried to discredit womenโs firsthand experience of pregnancy. Male doctors claimed pregnancy as a medical terrain – a realm that belonged to them exclusively.
Based on womenโs own bodily sensations โ not on medical diagnosis โ quickening was denigrated. Quickening, of course, made doctors dependent on womenโs self-diagnosis and judgment. Dr. Horatio R. Storer, the leader of the medical campaigns against abortion, described quickening as โin fact but a sensation.โ In such a context, it could no longer be framed as the basis from where all moral, social and legal standards emerged.
In the Dobbs decision, Alito says: โThe Court finds that the right to abortion is not deeply rooted in the Nationโs history and tradition.โ This is a historical fact: Protection of the right to abortion wasnโt around in America before Roe.
But it is also an incomplete picture of the full story. The criminalization of abortion, plus the decentralization of the womanโs experience, plus the medicalization of her feelings that led to that decision, are facets that belong to the long-gone 19th century.
No American lives in that century any more – not even Justice Alito.
Originally published by The Conversation, 07.06.2022, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.


