The Children's Era Theme of Women and Femininity

This theme is kind of unavoidable when you're talking about childbearing, right?

The element of womanhood at issue in "The Children's Era" is motherhood. Over and over, Sanger emphasizes that there's no hope for the future of children, the family, or civilization itself unless women can decide for themselves whether and when they become mothers.

Remember that old saying, "If Mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy"? Sanger would wear that on a t-shirt.

Questions About Women and Femininity

  1. What do you think of Sanger's characterization of "enforced […] maternity" (51) as slavery?
  2. What are the consequences of Sanger's discussion of how the wellbeing of the mother and child are connected for today's pro-life and pro-choice movements?
  3. Sanger says "the future of civilization" (52) literally depends upon birth control? What are some concrete ways that might be true or false?

Chew on This

Check out some potential thesis statements about The Children's Era.

Sanger uses the language of slavery and emancipation to give weight to her arguments.

Sanger's insistence that only a healthy and willing mother can produce healthy children is her primary appeal to those concerned with the future of the nation-state.