[On January 22, 1973, the Supreme Court released the Roe v. Wade decision. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that case and a handful of other histories and stories of abortion in the U.S., leading up to a weekend post on the current laws and debates.]
On the
compelling & telling American stories of four key Roe v. Wade figures.
1)
Sarah
Weddington and Linda
Coffee: The two attorneys who brought Roe
v. Wade to the Supreme Court (after first taking and arguing the case in their
home state of Texas) were both under 30 years old when they did so. I’ve
written both in this space and my book Of
Thee I Sing about the vital role that legal organizations like the
NAACP’s Legal
Defense Fund and MALDEF have played
in advancing the cause of civil rights and equality in the United States
throughout the 20th century. But at the same time, much of that work
was done by incredibly courageous individual lawyers, attorneys who were quite
often very early in their careers (perhaps because they hadn’t become more
conservative or cynical in their legal ideas or ambitions yet)—and who, in the
case of Weddington and Coffee, had no such communal or institutional
organization behind or supporting them, just the courage of their convictions.
2)
Henry
Wade: It’s quite something that the Texas District Attorney who prosecuted
Jack Ruby for murdering Lee Harvey Oswald isn’t best known for that shocking 20th
century moment and case, but there’s no doubt that Henry Wade will first and
forever be tied to the case that bears his name. The Innocence Project of Texas might argue
differently, however—that legal activist organization is focused on
more than 250 cases that Wade prosecuted in his three and a half decades as
DA, noting that Wade’s policy of “convict
at all costs” has already been revealed through DNA evidence to have
railroaded nearly twenty innocent people. To be clear, Wade didn’t choose to
prosecute Roe v. Wade—that case was
brought by Weddington and Coffee, and it seems that Wade was
relatively indifferent to the eventual outcome. But I think it’s important
to remember that women who had abortions in 1970 Texas were perceived and
treated as criminals just as much as any of those pursued by Wade’s office—and
as wrongly as it seems many of them were.
3)
Norma
McCorvey: As that hyperlinked NPR piece traces, and as has become
relatively common knowledge in recent years, the specific such woman who became
“Jane Roe” had a very complicated
and evolving relationship to the issue of abortion. The choice of McCorvey
by Weddington and Coffee was also complicated, and echoes to a degree the way
in which Rosa
Parks became the face of the Montgomery bus boycott—McCorvey
was a married woman with two children and was pregnant for a third time in
1969 (a pregnancy she did not want to carry to term but was forced to), and
thus a living repudiation of certain narrow stereotypes about women who sought
out abortions. What each of those details truly reminds us, of course, is that
every woman to whom abortion laws applies—which is every woman—has an
individual identity and story that can’t be reduced to one frame, which I would
argue is precisely the goal of protecting each individual’s right to make their
own decisions about reproduction, health, family, and more.
Next
AbortionStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
No comments:
Post a Comment