Unseemly and unwomanly behaviour: Comparing women’s control of their fertility in Australia and England from 1890 to 1970
Hera Cook ()
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Hera Cook: The University of Sydney
Journal of Population Research, 2000, vol. 17, issue 2, No 4, 125-141
Abstract:
Abstract From 1890 to 1970 Australian women’s use of female-controlled birth control methods was higher than that of English women. The latter primarily depended upon withdrawal and condoms. Use of these male-controlled methods of contraception is associated with low levels of female sexual pleasure, and the belief that husbands should initiate sexual activity and should control their wives’ fertility. I argue that higher use of female methods gave white Australian women greater sexual and reproductive autonomy throughout this period. The view that they were in a less desirable position than women in other Anglo cultures needs to be examined more closely.
Keywords: Fertility Decline; Marital Fertility; Australian Woman; Marriage Cohort; Birth Control Practice (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2000
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DOI: 10.1007/BF03029461
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