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This month, the Boston Women's Health Book Collective publishes an expanded edition of the now-classic women's health reference. The first major revision in 14 years, Our Bodies, Ourselves for the New Century: A Book by and for Women (Touchstone Books/Simon & Schuster) introduces exhaustive information on managed care, violence against women, alternative medicine, new reproductive technologies, online health resources, HIV prevention and treatment, and the impact of racism on sexuality and health.
The idea for the book was born in 1969, when talk of equal rights swirled in coffee shops and basements, when "sisters" gathered to rally for change. In the spring of that year, 12 women from the Boston area founded a group, the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, to run conferences about the undertreated subject of women's health. To go with the conferences, they wrote a course book, complete with evocative, even provocative, anecdotes from real women; sketches of the female anatomy; and forthright photos. Four million copies and many translations later, the book has ditched its more militant artwork -- a closed fist within the woman symbol adorned its original introduction -- and added a confessional preface by Gloria Steinem.
But not everything has changed. When originally published in 1970, Our Bodies, Ourselves (then titled Women and Their Bodies) pushed a controversial agenda: it urged women to take control of their bodies and thereby take control of the male-dominated health-care system. The system has come a long way, but certainly not all the way: today, for instance, even though women use the medical system more extensively than men do, most health studies continue to be performed on men.
It's hard to find a woman who's not a fan of Our Bodies, Ourselves, although not everyone is happy with the Boston Women's Health Book Collective. A year ago, four women of color filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, alleging that they were treated unfairly while employed by the nonprofit group, which is, for the most part, still run by the white, middle-class women who founded it. The charge remains under consideration as Our Bodies, Ourselves for the New Century -- with an increased focus on diversity and back-cover blurbs by African-American and Hispanic women's health-care leaders -- arrives in bookstores.
Paula B. Doress-Worters, 59, is one of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective's founders, an original author of Our Bodies, Ourselves and a member of the 1998 revision committee. From her Newton home, she spoke with us about the new edition and the ongoing fight for equitable women's health care, which looms as urgently as ever. |
Our Bodies, Ourselves then -- and now
The great-grandmother of today's Our Bodies, Ourselves is a stapled, tattered, 200-page booklet titled Women and Their Bodies, now preserved like the Magna Carta in the archives of the collective's Somerville offices. Its cover photo, which depicts smiling activists holding a WOMEN UNITE sign, appears in a photo collage on the front of the revised edition. Here are some excerpts from the first and latest volumes of the book, showing how Our Bodies, Ourselves has evolved.
Excerpts from Women and Their Bodies (1970)
We as women are redefining competence: a doctor who behaves in a male chauvinist way is not competent, even if he has medical skills. We have decided that health can no longer be defined by an elite group of white, upper-middle-class men. It must be defined by us.
Our society adds insult to injury by demanding that the truly "womanly" woman be soft, somewhat weak, and awkward -- in short, physically unfit.
And if we should be so bold as to go to a doctor [to talk about sex] . . . chances are he will know nothing about it, although he will never or rarely admit this and will probably laughingly dismiss our questions. Doctors in general are as ignorant about sexuality as the rest of men in society.
Masturbation is a special way of enjoying ourselves.
What are our bodies? First they are us. We do not inhabit them -- we are them (as well as mind). This realization should lead to anger at those people who have subtly persuaded us to look upon our bodies (ourselves) as no more than commodities to be given in return for favors.
Power to our sisters!!
Excerpts from Our Bodies, Ourselves for the New Century (1998)
Like many groups initially formed by white women, we have struggled against society's, and our own, internalized presumption that middle-class white women are representative of all women and thus have the right to define women's health issues and set priorities. This assumption does a great injustice by ignoring and silencing the voices of women of color, depriving us all of hard-won wisdom and crucial, lifesaving information.
Just imagine what would happen if we were to take all the energy we expend trying to conform to society's standard of beauty and direct it somewhere else.
Through [the] Internet, a woman entering menopause can research hormone treatments or self-help approaches; a pregnant lesbian can discuss parenting issues with other lesbian moms; a woman on welfare can find organizations that may help her advocate for the assistance she needs.
For those of us who are women of color, masturbation may be one part of a larger effort to give ourselves the care we need. . . . Valuing our personal needs is a step toward empowerment in our lives.
All of us as women face the troubling paradox of seeking to open ourselves to the deep vulnerabilities of sexual loving in a society in which we are often not safe or valued.
To transform the world into a healthy place we need the energy of all women.
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