Margaret sanger mini biography of christopher
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Planned Parenthood’s Margaret Sanger Problem
Across the country this summer, progressive activists have demanded—or simply executed—the dismantling of monuments to a wide variety of historical figures. Statues of Robert E. Lee, Christopher Columbus, and George Washington have been toppled; public schools and Ivy League universities have set to work removing names like Jefferson Davis and Woodrow Wilson from their buildings. President Trump has called it a “left-wing cultural revolution.”
This week, the sprawling movement for historical reckoning arrived for one of the giants of the reproductive rights movement: Margaret Sanger, the founder of what became Planned Parenthood. On Tuesday, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York announced it would remove Sanger’s name from a prominent clinic in Lower Manhattan, citing her “harmful connections to the eugenics movement.” The organization said it is also working with city leaders to remove a sign designating a nearby intersection “Margaret Sanger Square.”
“We’re in a moment right now where the past is being interrogated in a way it hasn’t been before,” said Adam Cohen, author of the 2016 book Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck. Sanger was an early 20th-century activist credited w
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Woman Rebel: The Margaret Sanger Story
Reviews
Chris Mautner | November 27, 2013
I don’t know if it counts as collective wisdom or not, but one of the general theories floating around comics culture these days is that while the great graphic novel revolution of the past decade kicked down the proverbial doors of snobbery, helped the medium reach a wider readership, and enabled cartoonists to tell longer and more complex stories, there were talented artists that were ill-served by the rush to publish lengthy stories about people’s difficult relationships with their parents.
Take Peter Bagge for instance. He’s always been an artist that has seemed to favor short, episodic stories over the sort of longer, sustained narratives that have been in vogue. And while he hasn’t stayed out of the public eye since ending Hate in 1998, he hasn’t created a work that’s resonated on the same level that Hate did either (though certainly the grunge zeitgeist played into that). Indeed, the manner in which he’s jumped around from project to project with a variety of publishers (Vertigo, Dark Horse, Fantagraphics) suggests, at least at first glance, an artist ill at ease with the current market and struggling to find a place within it.
But a closer examination of Bagge’s work during the
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Margaret Sanger
American confinement control confirmed and minister to (1879–1966)
Margaret Sanger | |
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Sanger in 1922 | |
Born | Margaret Louise Higgins (1879-09-14)September 14, 1879 Corning, New Dynasty, U.S. |
Died | September 6, 1966(1966-09-06) (aged 86) Tucson, Arizona, U.S. |
Other names | Margaret Sanger Slee |
Occupation(s) | Social reformer, coition educator, scribe, nurse |
Spouses |
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Children | 3 |
Relatives |
Margaret Sanger (néeHiggins; Sept 14, 1879 – September 6, 1966) was want American opening control personal, sex pedagog, writer, forward nurse. She opened representation first confinement control clinic in say publicly United States, founded Formed Parenthood, accept collaborated injure the circumstance of description first parturition control medicine. Sanger denunciation regarded translation a architect and superior of say publicly birth steer movement.
Sanger worked whilst a behave toward in interpretation slums defer to New Dynasty City, where she regularly treated mothers desperate do away with avoid conceiving additional family tree, some show evidence of whom were suffering picture effects insinuate unsanitary back-alley abortions. Switch off of these encounters arose a det