Acknowledgments
Glossary
Introduction
Chapter One: The Patronymic of Her Choice: Nikita S. Khrushchev and
Postwar Pronatalist Policy
Chapter Two: Abortion Surveillance and Women's Medicine
Chapter Three: Postwar Marriage and Divorce: The New Single Mother
and Her
Mie Nakachi is Associate Professor of Global Studies at Hokusei Gakuen University. She is the co-editor of Reproductive States: Global Perspectives on the Invention and Implementation of Population Policy (OUP, 2016).
"In the wake of the catastrophic losses of World War II, Soviet
citizens sought to rebuild their lives and families. In this
groundbreaking study, Nakachi examines the efforts of women,
doctors, and health officials to counter the fierce pronatalism of
the state. Her book is indispensable reading for anyone interested
in the ongoing struggle over women's reproductive rights." -- Wendy
Z. Goldman, co-author of Fortress Dark and Stern: The Soviet Home
Front
during World War II
"Replacing the Dead makes a quantum leap forward in our
understanding of gender, reproduction, and family planning after
World War II. Distinguished by impressive archival sleuthing and
crystal clear prose, Nakachi's book is a landmark study that will
inform and inspire a new generation of work." -- Paula A. Michaels,
author of Lamaze: An International History
"Mie Nakachi's brilliant book shows conclusively the combination of
incompetence and insensitivity in postwar pronatalist policies that
criminalized abortion, restricted divorce, and liberated men from
parental responsibility for children born out of wedlock. Nakachi
shows how the authorities jerry-rigged the system to try to
accomplish multiple goals at the same time, leaving only doctors
and women themselves to advocate for women's rights to control
their own
fertility. This book is a must-read for anyone who wants to know
not only about reproduction in the context of a demographic
disaster but also about the workings of Soviet policy makers who
often
operated from hidden motivations that they shared only in
behind-the-scenes documents." -- Elizabeth A. Wood, author of The
Baba and the Comrade: Gender and Politics in Revolutionary
Russia
"A monumental and gripping study of the politics of the family and
reproduction in the USSR under and after Stalin. Among other
things, Nakachi explains how the world's first law to recognize a
woman's right to abortion came about in 1955, and in a country
without a modern feminist movement." -- Timothy J. Colton, author
of Russia: What Everyone Needs to Know
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