From bad women to mad women: A genealogical analysis of abortion discourses in Aotearoa New Zealand

Although abortion discourses are often polarised into 'a woman's right to choose' versus a 'foetus's right to life', mental health is emerging as a prevailing paradigm for conceiving of abortion in New Zealand. Abortion remains criminalised in New Zealand and a literal...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNew Zealand sociology Vol. 28; no. 2; pp. 104 - 119
Main Author Leask, Marita
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Auckland, N.Z University of Auckland, Sociology, School of Social Sciences 2013
Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0112-921X
1173-1036
1173-1036

Cover

Abstract Although abortion discourses are often polarised into 'a woman's right to choose' versus a 'foetus's right to life', mental health is emerging as a prevailing paradigm for conceiving of abortion in New Zealand. Abortion remains criminalised in New Zealand and a literal reading of the legislation governing abortion would suggest that it is only available in limited circumstances. However, due to a broad interpretation of the mental health ground, less than two percent of requests for abortions are refused (Abortion Supervisory Committee, 2003). As Myra Marx Ferree and others argue, the institutional context of abortion law affects which discourses become culturally resonant (Ferree, Gamson, Gerhards, and Rucht, 2002). The harnessing of the mental health discourse in relation to abortion reshapes women's status as subjects in reproductive decision making. Whereas in the 1930s and 1960s women were morally condemned for making a selfish decision or murdering an autonomous foetus respectively, the mental health discourse calls women's very mental capacity to choose into question. Thus, women are painted as unfortunate victims of circumstance who require guidance through the law or psychological support. The argument for a woman's right to choose conceives women as autonomous agents who are best placed to make reproductive decisions governing their bodies and their lives. However, in challenging women's status as moral actors, the mental health paradigm insidiously challenges women's very ability to choose abortion.
AbstractList A critical genealogical account of abortion is important because the history of abortion shapes understandings of abortion in the present. The shifting discursive constructions of women, as bad for 'selfishly' abrogating motherhood or 'murdering an unborn child' to 'mad' in the mental health discourse, have material implications for women's subjectivities. The historical constructions of abortion are of vital importance in shaping women's subjectivities. Ultimately, the historically contingent nature of constructions of abortion and the women who have them illustrate the potential for transforming understandings of abortion. Only rational, autonomous people are afforded the capacity to make decisions. The framework of New Zealand's abortion law requires most women to state that continuing their pregnancy will cause them mental health problems in order to procure an abortion. Thus, most women seeking abortions must name themselves as mentally fragile subjects. This naming performatively undercuts women's status as autonomous agents. Concurrently, anti-abortion groups and outlier positivist scientists claim that abortion causes mental health problems. If this claim becomes resonant, the legal basis for most abortions in New Zealand will be eliminated. Thus, in the mental health paradigm, women who have abortions are conceived as mentally troubled victims who are incapable of claiming a right to bodily autonomy. Adapted from the source document. Reprinted by permission of the editors, New Zealand Sociology, School of Social and Cultural Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
If the claim that abortion causes mental health problems gains resonance then women's legal access to abortion could be severely limited. [...]if these groups convince women that abortion will cause them mental health problems, it may have a constitutive effect in dissuading women from procuring abortions. [...]mental health, the ground that has enabled relatively liberal access to abortion, is also the ground that may challenge women's ability to have abortions.2 In the discursive construction of women who have abortions as bad moral agents in the pro-natalist and foetal based discourses, women are condemned for being moral actors who make bad decisions.
A critical genealogical account of abortion is important because the history of abortion shapes understandings of abortion in the present. The shifting discursive constructions of women, as bad for 'selfishly' abrogating motherhood or 'murdering an unborn child' to 'mad' in the mental health discourse, have material implications for women's subjectivities. The historical constructions of abortion are of vital importance in shaping women's subjectivities. Ultimately, the historically contingent nature of constructions of abortion and the women who have them illustrate the potential for transforming understandings of abortion. Only rational, autonomous people are afforded the capacity to make decisions. The framework of New Zealand's abortion law requires most women to state that continuing their pregnancy will cause them mental health problems in order to procure an abortion. Thus, most women seeking abortions must name themselves as mentally fragile subjects. This naming performatively undercuts women's status as autonomous agents. Concurrently, anti-abortion groups and outlier positivist scientists claim that abortion causes mental health problems. If this claim becomes resonant, the legal basis for most abortions in New Zealand will be eliminated. Thus, in the mental health paradigm, women who have abortions are conceived as mentally troubled victims who are incapable of claiming a right to bodily autonomy. Adapted from the source document.
Analyses abortion discourses in NZ from the mid-1930s onward, with a focus on the emergence of mental health as a prevailing paradigm for conceiving of abortion and how that reshapes women's status as subjects in reproductive decision making. Observes that whereas in the 1930s and 1960s women were morally condemned for making a selfish decision or murdering an autonomous foetus respectively, the mental health discourse calls women's very mental capacity to choose into question and, thus, paints women as unfortunate victims of circumstance who require guidance through the law or psychological support. Suggests that the argument for a woman's right to choose conceives women as autonomous agents who are best placed to make reproductive decisions governing their bodies and their lives; however, in challenging women's status as moral actors, the mental health paradigm insidiously challenges women's very ability to choose abortion. Source: National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, licensed by the Department of Internal Affairs for re-use under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand Licence.
Although abortion discourses are often polarised into 'a woman's right to choose' versus a 'foetus's right to life', mental health is emerging as a prevailing paradigm for conceiving of abortion in New Zealand. Abortion remains criminalised in New Zealand and a literal reading of the legislation governing abortion would suggest that it is only available in limited circumstances. However, due to a broad interpretation of the mental health ground, less than two percent of requests for abortions are refused (Abortion Supervisory Committee, 2003). As Myra Marx Ferree and others argue, the institutional context of abortion law affects which discourses become culturally resonant (Ferree, Gamson, Gerhards, and Rucht, 2002). The harnessing of the mental health discourse in relation to abortion reshapes women's status as subjects in reproductive decision making. Whereas in the 1930s and 1960s women were morally condemned for making a selfish decision or murdering an autonomous foetus respectively, the mental health discourse calls women's very mental capacity to choose into question. Thus, women are painted as unfortunate victims of circumstance who require guidance through the law or psychological support. The argument for a woman's right to choose conceives women as autonomous agents who are best placed to make reproductive decisions governing their bodies and their lives. However, in challenging women's status as moral actors, the mental health paradigm insidiously challenges women's very ability to choose abortion.
Author Marita Leask
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  fullname: Leask, Marita
BackLink https://natlib-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/search?query=any,contains,997877133602837&tab=innz&search_scope=INNZ&vid=NLNZ&offset=0$$DView this record in NLNZ
BookMark eNqNkE9rFEEQxRuJ4Gb1OzR4yWWgq2v6n-SyBKNCSC4K4mWo6akNs8x0J9OzRP30tiZB8OTpUfB7j1fvVJyknPiF2AA4bEChPREbBaCboOHrK3FaykEpdKj1RsTLJc-yp0E-5JmTXLOcn493cidvOTFN-XaMNElKNP0oY5F5L6nPyzrmJIexxHxcChc5JrnLK9OSSV7zg_xWrZSG1-LlnqbCb550K75cvv988bG5uvnw6WJ31STdmrXpSROyJU9qQFRDCBjAQw-RjVHUKxPYot2ryEQY2fYugGtRQ2i9wohbcfaYe7fk-yOXtZtrN55qB87H0oG1Do3RrfoPVGsdrG9DRd_-gx7qu3WJSpk6o4c2mL9UmtLPbkwDf68agvPOAaJV2tfFt-L8kVrmce1iniaOv0csB1prnOoQwVb3Pv8BvNXWgTfeW0Dj8ReTdo2x
CODEN NZSOEE
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Copyright Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand 2013
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand 2013
DBID DUNLO
GOM
0-V
3V.
4U-
7U4
7XB
88J
8BJ
8FK
ABUWG
AFKRA
ALSLI
AYAGU
AZQEC
BENPR
BHHNA
CCPQU
DWI
DWQXO
FQK
GNUQQ
HEHIP
JBE
M2R
M2S
PHGZM
PHGZT
PKEHL
POGQB
PQEST
PQQKQ
PQUKI
PRQQA
Q9U
WZK
DatabaseName Index New Zealand (A&I)
Index New Zealand
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection【Remote access available】
ProQuest Central (Corporate)
University Readers
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)
Social Science Database (Alumni Edition)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
Social Science Premium Collection
Australia & New Zealand Database
ProQuest Central Essentials
ProQuest Central
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest One Community College
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest Central
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Student
Sociology Collection (OCUL)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
Social Science Database
Sociology Database
Proquest Central Premium
ProQuest One Academic (New)
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest One Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Basic
Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)
DatabaseTitle University Readers
ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest Central Student
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest Central Essentials
ProQuest Social Science Journals (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Community College
Sociology & Social Sciences Collection
ProQuest Central
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
ProQuest Central Korea
ProQuest Sociology Collection
ProQuest Central (New)
Australia & New Zealand Database
ProQuest Sociology
Social Science Premium Collection
ProQuest One Social Sciences
ProQuest Central Basic
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition
Sociology Collection
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
ProQuest Social Science Journals
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic (New)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
DatabaseTitleList International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
University Readers
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)


Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: BENPR
  name: ProQuest Central
  url: http://www.proquest.com/pqcentral?accountid=15518
  sourceTypes: Aggregation Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Sociology & Social History
Law
EISSN 1173-1036
EndPage 119
ExternalDocumentID 3235538601
997877133602837
10.3316/informit.862671858861358
Genre Student Prize Essays
Feature
GeographicLocations New Zealand
GeographicLocations_xml – name: New Zealand
GroupedDBID 0-V
123
3V.
8R4
8R5
ABUWG
ADMHG
ADZJE
AFKRA
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALSLI
ARALO
ARTTT
AS1
AS2
ASOEW
AYAGU
AZQEC
BENPR
BPHCQ
CCPQU
DWQXO
EABDJ
EAZ
EBS
EJD
ESI
GNUQQ
HEHIP
IAEEK
KEL
KFS
M2R
M2S
OK1
P2P
PQQKQ
PROAC
Q2X
W4N
ABTAH
DUNLO
GOM
ZY4
4U-
7U4
7XB
8BJ
8FK
BHHNA
DWI
FQK
JBE
PHGZM
PHGZT
PKEHL
POGQB
PQEST
PQUKI
PRQQA
PUEGO
Q9U
WZK
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-n245t-ba2a3e6a8a0d330d9939181b1ce550ab059e636f0ceaa3ce6b7917432194803c3
IEDL.DBID BENPR
ISSN 0112-921X
1173-1036
IngestDate Fri Sep 05 06:51:25 EDT 2025
Fri Sep 05 05:59:06 EDT 2025
Fri Sep 12 04:41:29 EDT 2025
Tue Nov 26 10:36:41 EST 2024
Wed Jan 29 00:04:20 EST 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 2
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-n245t-ba2a3e6a8a0d330d9939181b1ce550ab059e636f0ceaa3ce6b7917432194803c3
Notes New Zealand Sociology, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2013, 104-119
Informit, Melbourne (Vic)
Archived by the National Library of New Zealand
Online ISSN 1173-1036
Includes notes, references
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ObjectType-Article-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
PQID 1503781495
PQPubID 276254
PageCount 16
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_1667355240
proquest_miscellaneous_1622296849
proquest_journals_1503781495
nlnz_indexnz_997877133602837
rmit_collectionsjats_10_3316_informit_862671858861358
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2013-00-00
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2013-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – year: 2013
  text: 2013-00-00
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationPlace Auckland, N.Z
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Auckland, N.Z
– name: Hamilton
PublicationTitle New Zealand sociology
PublicationYear 2013
Publisher University of Auckland, Sociology, School of Social Sciences
Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
Publisher_xml – name: University of Auckland, Sociology, School of Social Sciences
– name: Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
SSID ssj0037322
Score 1.880703
Snippet Although abortion discourses are often polarised into 'a woman's right to choose' versus a 'foetus's right to life', mental health is emerging as a prevailing...
Analyses abortion discourses in NZ from the mid-1930s onward, with a focus on the emergence of mental health as a prevailing paradigm for conceiving of...
If the claim that abortion causes mental health problems gains resonance then women's legal access to abortion could be severely limited. [...]if these groups...
A critical genealogical account of abortion is important because the history of abortion shapes understandings of abortion in the present. The shifting...
SourceID proquest
nlnz
rmit
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 104
SubjectTerms Abortion
Access
Committees
Decision making
Discourse
Discourses
Families & family life
Female offenders
Females
Genealogy
Health Problems
Homicide
Law
Law and legislation
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Moral and ethical aspects
New Zealand
Selfishness
Sociological aspects
Subjectivity
Women
Women's rights
Womens health
Title From bad women to mad women: A genealogical analysis of abortion discourses in Aotearoa New Zealand
URI http://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.862671858861358
https://natlib-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/search?query=any,contains,997877133602837&tab=innz&search_scope=INNZ&vid=NLNZ&offset=0
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1503781495
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1622296849
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1667355240
Volume 28
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV1LS8QwEA66XryIT9x1lRHEW7GbNI8KIutjEcFFRMFbSdoUFG3VrQf99c704ePiqZROoc0kM98kM_Mxtid5arTTPEi9o90qbwLnch2MEGvnUay9yKka-WqqLu6iy3t5P8emXS0MpVV2NrE21FmZ0h75AQIXQe2ZYnn88hoQaxSdrnYUGralVsiO6hZj82wBTbLBeb9wcj69vulss9CiOVdAlBHEnBo19oqn4vMPvPxVSV87mckyW2rRIYwbda6wOV-sssF3UQnsQ1NOC013j481lk7eymc4sRnUXJRQlXDV3RzCGKittG3tG3QdSKDMgTixSClw9jDDv6JUDngoYFxSgm9pAa0ftImP6-xucn57ehG0xAlBwSNZBc5yK7yyxoaZEGGGGCRGT-5GqceAxDqEVF4JlYept1akXjkdU2SC1isyoUjFBg5LWfhNBp67WEuvOL4djXhuMielR7efaxllLu-zIQ1gUvd2xGuMUammwFcRcNH4uBvYpF0cs-RHlX22-_0YpzWdVdjCl-8oo4hoXJko_k9GaYRLiEn6TJLSElo7dQZbMXu0FUqEiRAjlTRNaFGA4jf0xtIYhDHSDP7_vC22yGv2C9pxGbJe9fbutxGDVG6nnVhf5MjbQA
linkProvider ProQuest
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV3dT9RAEJ_g8aAvBr_iAeqYqG-Nd7vdj5oQcwiXQ7iLMZDwVnfbbQKRFrgSgn-cf5sz_UB94Y2npum0aWbn4ze78wHwTonMGm9ElAXPu1XBRt4XJhoT1i7ixARZcDXyfKFnR_HXY3W8Ar_7WhhOq-xtYmOo8yrjPfKPBFwkt2dK1Ofzi4inRvHpaj9Cw3WjFfKtpsVYV9ixH26uKYRbbu3t0Hq_F2K6e_hlFnVTBqJSxKqOvBNOBu2sG-UU3OfksBNye36cBULvzhP-CFrqYpQF52QWtDcJw3hS9diOZCbpuw9gNeYK1wGsbu8uvn3vfYE0sj3HIFQTJYIbQw7Kn-Wv_-DsP5X7jVObrsHjDo3ipBWfJ7ASyqewflvEgh-wLd_FtpvIzTPIppfVGW67HJvZl1hXOO9vPuEEuY216-wp9h1PsCqQZ3CxEODOyZK4yKkjeFLipOKE4sohWVvsEi2fw9G9sPAFsaUqw0vAIHxiVNCC3o7HorC5VyoQzCiMinNfDGGTGZg2vSTpmlAUbDjQ1gyUDD3uGZt2yrhM_4rOEN7ePiY14rMRV4bqimg0DzbXNk7uotGG4BlhoCEoXrSUdbXJmCuXp64milEq5VinbdNbIuB4kby_spZgk7Lrd__eG3g4O5wfpAd7i_0NeCSayRu827MJg_ryKrwi_FP7152QIfy4b7n-A9G9F4g
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMw1V1Lb9QwELbKVkJcKE-xbYFBAm5pd-34ESSEAsvSUlpxYKVyCrbjSKUlod2sqvan8Vf4M8zkUR6H3nrgFEWeRIlnPPN5PA_GnkrujXaaRz448lYFEzlX6GiMWLuIEx1EQdnIu3tqaxa_35f7S-xHnwtDYZW9TmwUdV558pFvInARVJ4pkZtFFxbxcTJ99f04og5SdNLat9NoRWQnnJ3i9m3-cnuCvH7G-fTtpzdbUddhICp5LOvIWW5FUNbYUY4b-xyNdYImz419QORuHWKPoIQqRj5YK3xQTicE4XGZx2YkvMD3XmPLRqGZHbDl9HP6btbbAaFFe4aBiCZKOBWFHJRH5flfUPaPrP3GoE1X2M9-Kto4lsONRe02_Pk_VSL_z7m6xW52OBvSdmHcZkuhvMNWL9Jz4Dm0icnQ1kk5u8v89KT6Bq9tDk1XT6gr2O1vXkAKVKDbdpYC-louUBVA3cVIvGFyMPdVExQDByWkFYVKVxbQjkAXQnqPza7kp-8j06syPGAQuEu0DIrj0_GYFyZ3UgYEUIWWce6KIVsn8ciaKpl4TXB_r8mFoAgCahzueZ11amae_Wb0kD25GEYFQac-tgzVAmkUtWxXJk4uo1EagSeiuyGTJJIZaaEmFrCcf7U1UowyIcYqa8v5IgHthBHXSGMQEEqzevnnPWbXUQKzD9t7O2vsBm9aipAba50N6pNFeIjArnaPuhUE7MtVC-Iv_o1drw
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=From+bad+women+to+mad+women+%3A+a+genealogical+analysis+of+abortion+discourses+in+Aotearoa+New+Zealand&rft.jtitle=New+Zealand+sociology&rft.au=Leask%2C+Marita&rft.date=2013&rft.issn=0112-921X&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=104&rft.epage=119&rft.externalDBID=GOM&rft.externalDocID=997877133602837
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0112-921X&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0112-921X&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0112-921X&client=summon