The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 4 : Round the World for Birth Control, 1920-1966. Volume 4, 'Round the world for birth control, 1920-1966
معرفی کتاب «The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 4 : Round the World for Birth Control, 1920-1966. Volume 4, 'Round the world for birth control, 1920-1966» نوشتهٔ Margaret Sanger, Esther Katz, Cathy Moran Hajo, Peter C. Engelman، منتشرشده توسط نشر University of Illinois Press در سال 2016. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
When Margaret Sanger returned to Europe in 1920, World War I had altered the social landscape as dramatically as it had the map of Europe. Population concerns, sexuality, venereal disease, and contraceptive use had entered public discussion, and Sanger's birth control message found receptive audiences around the world. This volume focuses on Sanger from her groundbreaking overseas advocacy during the interwar years through her postwar role in creating the International Planned Parenthood Federation. The documents reconstruct Sanger's dramatic birth control advocacy tours through early 1920s Germany, Japan, and China in the midst of significant government and religious opposition to her ideas. They also trace her tireless efforts to build a global movement through international conferences and tours. Letters, journal entries, writings, and other records reveal Sanger's contentious dealings with other activists, her correspondence with the likes of Albert Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt, and Sanger's own dramatic evolution from gritty grassroots activist to postwar power broker and diplomat. A powerful documentary history of a transformative twentieth-century figure, The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 4 is a primer for the debates on individual choice, sex education, and planned parenthood that remain all-too-pertinent in our own time. | Cover Title Page Copyright Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Editorial Method Abbreviations Chronology Chapter 1: Abroad! 1. Feb. 1920 / "Light for Mexico and South America" 2. Aug. 18, 1920 / "Women in Germany" 3. Sept. 7, 1920 / "Women in Germany" 4. Oct. 1, 1920 / From Johannes Rutgers 6. Feb. 19, 1922 / To Hugh de Selincourt 7. Mar. 8, 1922 / To Anne Kennedy 8. Mar. 10, 1922 / Journal Entry 9. Mar. 12, 1922 / From Roberto Haberman 10. Mar. 14, 1922 / Journal Entry 11. Mar. 14, 1922 / "Overpopulation as a Cause of War" 12. Mar. 17, 1922 / Journal Entry 13. Mar. 18, 1922 / Journal Entry 14. Mar. 19, 1922 / Journal Entry 15. Apr. 7, 1922 / Journal Entry 17. Apr. 13, 1922 / Journal Entry 18. Apr. 16, 1922 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 20. Apr. 30, 1922 / Journal Entry 21. May 1, 1922 / Journal Entry 22. Journal Entry Chapter 2: Putting Birth Control on the Map 23. Apr. 5, 1923 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 24. Jan. 10, 1925 / To Lord Bertrand Dawson 25. Mar. 31, 1925 / "The Sixth International 26. Mar. 31, 1925 / International Federation 27. Apr. or May, 1925 / From Agnes Smedley 28. July 8, 1925 / From Mohandas K. Gandhi 29. Aug. 20, 1925 / From H. G. Wells 30. Aug. ?, 1925 / To H. G. Wells 31. Sept. 1925 / "Mahatma Gandhi and Birth Control in India" 32. Sept. 30, 1925 / From Rabindranath Tagore 33. Nov. 11, 1925 / To Rabindranath Tagore 34. Nov. 23, 1925 / To Adolfo Bernabé 35. Mar. 30, 1926 / To Clarence Cook Little 36. Mar. 31, 1926 / From José A. Lanauze Rolón 37. July 4, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 38. Oct. 23, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 39. Feb. 4, 1927 / From John Maynard Keynes 40. Apr. 8, 1927 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 41. May 22, 1927 / To Hugh de Selincourt 42. Aug. 27, 1927 / From Edith How-Martyn 43. Oct. 4, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 44. Oct. 13, 1927 / To Penelope B. Parker Huse 45. Nov. 8, 1927 / From Otto Lous Mohr 46. Dec. 11, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 47. Dec. 18, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 48. Jan. 9, 1928 / From Susanna Green Photo Section Chapter 3: Zurich 49. Mar. 30, 1928 / To Agnes Smedley 50. Jan. 3, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 51. Jan. 15, 1929 / To John Maynard Keynes 52. Jan–Feb. 1929 / "Motherhood Enslaved in Italy" 53. Feb. 15, 1929 / To Edith How-Martyn 54. Feb. 22, 1929 / From Agnes Smedley 55. Mar. 4, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 56. Apr. 4, 1929 / To... Cover Title Page Copyright Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Editorial Method Abbreviations Chronology Chapter 1: Abroad! 1. Feb. 1920 / “Light for Mexico and South America” 2. Aug. 18, 1920 / “Women in Germany” 3. Sept. 7, 1920 / “Women in Germany” 4. Oct. 1, 1920 / From Johannes Rutgers 5. Feb. 18, 1922 / To the Government of Japan 6. Feb. 19, 1922 / To Hugh de Selincourt 7. Mar. 8, 1922 / To Anne Kennedy 8. Mar. 10, 1922 / Journal Entry 9. Mar. 12, 1922 / From Roberto Haberman 10. Mar. 14, 1922 / Journal Entry 11. Mar. 14, 1922 / “Overpopulation as a Cause of War” 12. Mar. 17, 1922 / Journal Entry 13. Mar. 18, 1922 / Journal Entry 14. Mar. 19, 1922 / Journal Entry 15. Apr. 7, 1922 / Journal Entry 16. Apr. 11, 1922 / Journal Entry 17. Apr. 13, 1922 / Journal Entry 18. Apr. 16, 1922 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 19. Apr. 25, 1922 / Journal Entry 20. Apr. 30, 1922 / Journal Entry 21. May 1, 1922 / Journal Entry 22. Journal Entry Chapter 2: Putting Birth Control on the Map 23. Apr. 5, 1923 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 24. Jan. 10, 1925 / To Lord Bertrand Dawson 25. Mar. 31, 1925 / “The Sixth International 26. Mar. 31, 1925 / International Federation 27. Apr. or May, 1925 / From Agnes Smedley 28. July 8, 1925 / From Mohandas K. Gandhi 29. Aug. 20, 1925 / From H. G. Wells 30. Aug. ?, 1925 / To H. G. Wells 31. Sept. 1925 / “Mahatma Gandhi and Birth Control in India” 32. Sept. 30, 1925 / From Rabindranath Tagore 33. Nov. 11, 1925 / To Rabindranath Tagore 34. Nov. 23, 1925 / To Adolfo Bernabé 35. Mar. 30, 1926 / To Clarence Cook Little 36. Mar. 31, 1926 / From José A. Lanauze Rolón 37. July 4, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 38. Oct. 23, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 39. Feb. 4, 1927 / From John Maynard Keynes 40. Apr. 8, 1927 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 41. May 22, 1927 / To Hugh de Selincourt 42. Aug. 27, 1927 / From Edith How-Martyn 43. Oct. 4, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 44. Oct. 13, 1927 / To Penelope B. Parker Huse 45. Nov. 8, 1927 / From Otto Lous Mohr 46. Dec. 11, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 47. Dec. 18, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 48. Jan. 9, 1928 / From Susanna Green Photo Section Chapter 3: Zurich 49. Mar. 30, 1928 / To Agnes Smedley 50. Jan. 3, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 51. Jan. 15, 1929 / To John Maynard Keynes 52. Jan–Feb. 1929 / “Motherhood Enslaved in Italy” 53. Feb. 15, 1929 / To Edith How-Martyn 54. Feb. 22, 1929 / From Agnes Smedley 55. Mar. 4, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 56. Apr. 4, 1929 / To Edith How-Martyn 57. Sept. 7, 1929 / To Clinton F. Chance 58. Nov. 21, 1929 / Excerpt from Agnes Smedley 59. May 9, 1930 / To Clinton F. Chance 60. July 1, 1930 / From Client 61. Sept. 1, 1930 / “President’s Opening Address 62. Nov. 17, 1930 / To Juan Monforte 63. Mar. 8, 1931 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 64. Apr. 7, 1931 / To Shidzue Ishimoto 65. Apr. 8, 1931 / To Agnes Smedley 66. May 4, 1931 / From Agnes Smedley 67. June 29, 1931 / To the Nihon Sanji Chôsetsu Renmei Chapter 4: “The World Needs You” 68. Sept. 18, 1931 / To Edith How-Martyn 69. Oct. 23, 1931 / From Hildegart Rodríguez Carballeira 70. Nov. 20, 1931 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 71. Jan. 10, 1932 / To Edith How-Martyn 72. Feb. 3, 1932 / From Herman Rubinraut 73. Feb. 19, 1932 / To Hildegart Rodríguez Carballeira 74. Mar. 24, 1932 / To Herman Rubinraut 75. Apr. 1, 1932 / To Inés Lassise y Sierra de Marin 76. June 23, 1932 / From Edith How-Martyn 77. July 31, 1932 / To Edith How-Martyn 78. Sept. 15, 1932 / From Karla Popprová-Molínková 79. Oct. 4, 1932 / From Edith How-Martyn 80. Oct. 20, 1932 / To Edith How-Martyn 81. Dec. 3, 1932 / From Gerda Sebbelov Guy 82. Dec. 12, 1932 / To Karla Popprová-Molínková 83. Jan. 4, 1933 / To Adolf Meyer 84. Apr. 29, 1933 / To Franklin Delano Roosevelt 85. July 4, 1933 / To Havelock Ellis 86. Nov. 14, 1933 / To Herman Rubinraut 87. Feb. 14, 1934 / From Edith How-Martyn 88. Apr. 12, 1934 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 89. July 7, 1934 / To Gerda Sebbelov Guy 90. July 12, 1934 / To J. Noah Slee 91. July 17–19, 1934 / Excerpts from Report on Leningrad 92. July 20, 1934 / Excerpts from Journal Entry 93. July 24, 1934 / Excerpts from Journal Entry 94. July 29, 1934 / To Isaak Leont’evich Braude 95. Nov. 8, 1934 / From Herman Rubinraut 96. Feb. 2, 1935 / To Anna Ngan Chang Chou 97. Mar. 8, 1935 / To George Andreytchine Chapter 5: “Mother India” 98. July 16, 1935 / To Margaret Cousins 99. Aug. 13, 1935 / To Marian Paschal 100. Nov. 1, 1935 / Journal Entry 101. Nov. 14, 1935 / To C. P. Blacker 102. Nov. 20, 1935 / Journal Entry 103. Nov. 27, 1935 / To Mohandas K. Gandhi 104. Nov. 27–29, 1935 / Excerpts from Journal Entry 105. Nov. 30, 1935 / To Gerda Sebbelov Guy 106. Dec. 2, 1935 / Journal Entry 107. Dec. 4, 1935 / To Edith How-Martyn 108. Dec. 6, 1935 / From Client 109. Dec. 9, 1935 / To J. Noah Slee 110. Dec. 24, 1935 / From Client 111. Dec. 30, 1935 / To Client 112. Jan. 2, 1936 / News from Margaret Sanger 113. Jan. 10, 1936 / Journal Entry 114. Jan. 19, 1936 / “Does Mr. Gandhi Know Women?” 115. Jan. 30, 1936 / To Mohandas K. Gandhi 116. Jan. 30, 1936 / To John Henry Guy 117. Feb. 2, 1936 / To Havelock Ellis 118. Feb. 17, 1936 / Journal Entry 119. Mar. 4, 1936 / To Edith How-Martyn 120. Aug. 14, 1936 / To José Siurob Ramírez 121. Oct. 20, 1936 / To Mohandas K. Gandhi 122. Oct. 21, 1936 / To S. W. Lee 123. Nov. 6, 1936 / To the BCIIC Council 124. Dec. 1936 / “The Soviet Union’s Abortion Law” Chapter 6: A Troubled World 125. Jan. 25, 1937 / To Eleanor A. Hawarden 126. Mar. 26, 1937 / To Mei-ling Soong 127. May 15–17, 1937 / Journal Entry 128. May 18, 1937 / To Katherine Blondel 129. May 26, 1937 / Journal Entry 130. June 1937 / “What Margaret Sanger Thinks of Mussolini” 131. July 30, 1937 / To Florence Rose 132. Aug. 16–24, 1937 / Journal Entry 133. Aug. 30, 1937 / Speech at Opening Reception at Tokyo Clinic 134. Sept. 2–5, 1937 / Excerpt from Journal Entry 135. Oct. 29, 1937 / To Anna Ngan Chang Chou 136. Oct. 29, 1937 / To Edith How-Martyn 137. Jan. 11, 1938 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 138. Mar. 18, 1938 / To Frank Wang Co-Tui 139. June 3, 1938 / To Margaret A. Pyke 140. Oct. 9, 1938 / From Stephen Haweis 141. Mar. 30, 1940 / From Charles E. Pengelley 142. Sept. 9, 1940 / To Clarence James Gamble 143. Feb. 25, 1941 / To Mary Reinhardt Lasker Chapter 7: Reviving the International Movement 144. Oct. 25, 1945 / To Douglas A. MacArthur 145. Dec. 1, 1945 / To Shidzue Ishimoto Katō 146. Mar. 30, 1946 / To Anne-Marie Durand-Wever 147. Aug. 6, 1946 / To Ethel B. Weed 148. Aug. 25, 1946 / To Florence Rose 149. Dec. 23, 1946 / From Shidzue Ishimoto Katō 150. Jan. 16, 1947 / To Shidzue Ishimoto Katō 151. Mar. 29, 1947 / To Ernst Gräfenberg 152. July 26, 1947 / To Florence Rose 153. Feb. 1, 1948 / To Mary Reinhardt Lasker 154. Aug. 28, 1948 / To Mary Worley Compton 155. Feb. 8, 1949 / To Helen Donington Cohen 156. July 18, 1949 / To Shidzue Ishimoto Katō 157. Sept. 10, 1949 / To George H. Hendricks 158. Oct. 11, 1949 / To Mary Worley Compton 159. Oct. 15, 1949 / To Shidzue Ishimoto Katō 160. Feb. 13, 1950 / Statement on General Douglas MacArthur 161. Feb. 21, 1950 / To Florence Mahoney Chapter 8: The International Committee on Planned Parenthood 162. Jan. 23, 1951 / To Clair E. Folsome 163. July 10, 1951 / From Client 164. Aug. 30, 1951 / To Abraham Stone 165. Sept. 5, 1951 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 166. Oct. 8, 1951 / To Katharine Dexter McCormick 167. Oct. 25, 1951 / To C. P. Blacker 168. Dec. 3, 1951 / To Jawaharlal Nehru 169. Jan. 24, 1952 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 170. Mar. 7, 1952 / To Abraham Stone 171. May 29, 1952 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 172. June 28, 1952 / From Albert Einstein 173. July 8, 1952 / To Eleanor Roosevelt 174. July 11, 1952 / To Albert Einstein 175. Sept. 4, 1952 / To C. P. Blacker 176. Sept. 12, 1952 / To Vera Houghton 177. Nov. 8, 1952 / Excerpt from “Greetings from Japan” Chapter 9. The Culmination of a Life's Work 178. Nov. 10–12, 1952 / Excerpt from “Greetings from India” 179. Nov. 20, 1952 / Excerpts from “Greetings from India” 180. Dec. 8, 1952 / From Helen Keller 181. Jan. 8, 1953 / To Gobindram J. Watumull 182. Jan. 10?, 1953 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 183. May 29, 1953 / To Kageyas W. Amano 184. Aug. 15, 1953 / Excerpts from Journal Entry 185. Aug. 18, 1953 / To Lawrence Lader 186. Aug. 21, 1953 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 187. Aug. 23?, 1953 / Excerpts from Journal Entry 188. Nov. 10, 1953 / To William Vogt 189. Nov. 16, 1953 / To Kan Majima 190. Jan. 18, 1954 / To C. P. Blacker 191. Feb. 9, 1954 / To Gladys May Farquharson 192. Mar. 5, 1954 / To Lotte A. Fink 193. Apr. 9, 1954 / “Japan” 194. Apr. 16, 1954 / To Katharine Dexter McCormick 195. Apr. 18, 1954 / To Abraham Stone 196. June 25, 1954 / To Dhanvanthi Rama Rau 197. Jan. 17, 1955 / To Mary Reinhardt Lasker 198. Feb. 8, 1955 / To Vera Houghton 199. Oct. 18, 1955 / To Kuo Mo-Jo 200. Oct. 31, 1955 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush Chapter 10: The Trials of Being President 201. July 10, 1956 / To Hsue-Shen Tsien 202. Nov. 12, 1956 / To Dorothy Hamilton Brush 203. Apr. 10, 1957 / From C. P. Blacker 204. July 18, 1957 / To C. P. Blacker 205. Nov. 15, 1957 / To Ellen Jensen Watumull 206. Aug. 14, 1958 / To Rufus S. Day Jr. 207. Jan. 13, 1959 / To C. P. Blacker 208. Mar. 21, 1959 / To Amy du Pont 209. To Mary Reinhardt Lasker 210. Feb. 19, 1960 / To Martha Baird Rockefeller 211. Dec. 1966 / C. P. Blacker Tribute to Margaret Sanger 212. Nov. ?, 1955 / Burial Instructions Bibliography Index When Margaret Sanger returned to Europe in 1920, World War I had altered the social landscape as dramatically as it had the map of Europe. Population concerns, sexuality, venereal disease, and contraceptive use had entered public discussion, and Sanger's birth control message found receptive audiences around the world. This volume focuses on Sanger from her groundbreaking overseas advocacy during the interwar years through her postwar role in creating the International Planned Parenthood Federation. The documents reconstruct Sanger's dramatic birth control advocacy tours through early 1920s Germany, Japan, and China in the midst of significant government and religious opposition to her ideas. They also trace her tireless efforts to build a global movement through international conferences and tours. Letters, journal entries, writings, and other records reveal Sanger's contentious dealings with other activists, her correspondence with the likes of Albert Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt, and Sanger's own dramatic evolution from gritty grassroots activist to postwar power broker and diplomat. A powerful documentary history of a transformative twentieth-century figure, The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 4 is a primer for the debates on individual choice, sex education, and planned parenthood that remain all-too-pertinent in our own time. | Cover Title Page Copyright Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Editorial Method Abbreviations Chronology Chapter 1: Abroad! 1. Feb. 1920 / "Light for Mexico and South America" 2. Aug. 18, 1920 / "Women in Germany" 3. Sept. 7, 1920 / "Women in Germany" 4. Oct. 1, 1920 / From Johannes Rutgers 6. Feb. 19, 1922 / To Hugh de Selincourt 7. Mar. 8, 1922 / To Anne Kennedy 8. Mar. 10, 1922 / Journal Entry 9. Mar. 12, 1922 / From Roberto Haberman 10. Mar. 14, 1922 / Journal Entry 11. Mar. 14, 1922 / "Overpopulation as a Cause of War" 12. Mar. 17, 1922 / Journal Entry 13. Mar. 18, 1922 / Journal Entry 14. Mar. 19, 1922 / Journal Entry 15. Apr. 7, 1922 / Journal Entry 17. Apr. 13, 1922 / Journal Entry 18. Apr. 16, 1922 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 20. Apr. 30, 1922 / Journal Entry 21. May 1, 1922 / Journal Entry 22. Journal Entry Chapter 2: Putting Birth Control on the Map 23. Apr. 5, 1923 / From Shidzue Ishimoto 24. Jan. 10, 1925 / To Lord Bertrand Dawson 25. Mar. 31, 1925 / "The Sixth International 26. Mar. 31, 1925 / International Federation 27. Apr. or May, 1925 / From Agnes Smedley 28. July 8, 1925 / From Mohandas K. Gandhi 29. Aug. 20, 1925 / From H. G. Wells 30. Aug. ?, 1925 / To H. G. Wells 31. Sept. 1925 / "Mahatma Gandhi and Birth Control in India" 32. Sept. 30, 1925 / From Rabindranath Tagore 33. Nov. 11, 1925 / To Rabindranath Tagore 34. Nov. 23, 1925 / To Adolfo Bernabé 35. Mar. 30, 1926 / To Clarence Cook Little 36. Mar. 31, 1926 / From José A. Lanauze Rolón 37. July 4, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 38. Oct. 23, 1926 / To Edith How-Martyn 39. Feb. 4, 1927 / From John Maynard Keynes 40. Apr. 8, 1927 / To Juliet Barrett Rublee 41. May 22, 1927 / To Hugh de Selincourt 42. Aug. 27, 1927 / From Edith How-Martyn 43. Oct. 4, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 44. Oct. 13, 1927 / To Penelope B. Parker Huse 45. Nov. 8, 1927 / From Otto Lous Mohr 46. Dec. 11, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 47. Dec. 18, 1927 / To Edith How-Martyn 48. Jan. 9, 1928 / From Susanna Green Photo Section Chapter 3: Zurich 49. Mar. 30, 1928 / To Agnes Smedley 50. Jan. 3, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 51. Jan. 15, 1929 / To John Maynard Keynes 52. Jan–Feb. 1929 / "Motherhood Enslaved in Italy" 53. Feb. 15, 1929 / To Edith How-Martyn 54. Feb. 22, 1929 / From Agnes Smedley 55. Mar. 4, 1929 / To Katharina Lipinski Stützin 56. Apr. 4, 1929 / To... Publisher's Description: The Birth Control Crusader, Feminist, And Reformer Margaret Sanger Was One Of The Most Controversial And Compelling Figures In The Twentieth Century. This First Volume Of The Selected Papers Of Margaret Sanger Documents The Critical Phases And Influences Of An American Feminist Icon And Offers Rare Glimpses Into Her Working-class Childhood, Burgeoning Feminism, Spiritual And Scientific Interests, Sexual Explorations, And Diverse Roles As Wife, Mother, Nurse, Journalist, Radical Socialist, And Activist. These Letters And Other Writings, Including Diaries, Journals, Articles, And Speeches, Most Of Which Have Never Before Been Published, Have Been Selected And Assembled With An Eye To Telling The Story Of A Remarkable Life, Punctuated By Arrests And Imprisonments, Exile, Love Affairs, And A Momentous Personal Loss--a Life Consumed With The Quest For Women's Sexual Liberation. Because Its Narrative Line Is So Absorbing, Volume 1 May Be Read As A Powerful Biography. Volume 1 Covers A Twenty-eight-year Period From Nurse's Training And Early Socialist Involvement In Pre- World War I Bohemian Greenwich Village To Sanger's Adoption Of Birth Control (a Term She Helped Coin In 1914) As A Fundamental Tenet Of Women's Rights. It Traces The Intersection Of Her Life And Work With Other Reformers, Activists And Leaders Of Modernity On Both Sides Of The Atlantic, Including Havelock Ellis, H.g. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Emma Goldman, Max Eastman, And Eugene Debs, As Well As Many Leading Radical Artists And Writers Of The Day. It Highlights Her Legislative And Organizational Efforts, Her Support Of The Eugenics Movement, And The Alliances She Secured With Medical Professionals In Her Crusade To Make Birth Control Legal, Respectable, And Accessible. This Volume Also Includes Letters From Women Desperately In Need Of Fertility Control Who Saw Sanger As Their Last Hope. Supplemented By An Introduction, Brief Essays Providing Narrative And Chronological Links, And Substantial Notes, The Volume Is An Invaluable Tool For Understanding Sanger's Actions And Accomplishments. The Documents Assembled Here, More Than 80 Percent Of Them Letters, Were Culled From The Margaret Sanger Papers Microfilm Edition, Edited By Esther Katz, Cathy Moran Hajo, And Peter C. Engelman. Two Subsequent Volumes Will Address Later Periods In Her Life, And An Additional Volume Will Cover Her International Work In The Birth Control Struggle. V. 1: The Woman Rebel, 1900-1928 -- V. 2. Birth Control Comes Of Age, 1928-1939 -- V. 3. Politics Of Planned Parenthood, 1939-1966 -- V. 4. 'round The World For Birth Control, 1920-1966. Edited By Esther Katz ; Assistant Editors, Cathy Moran Hajo And Peter C. Engelman. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.
دانلود کتاب The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 4 : Round the World for Birth Control, 1920-1966. Volume 4, 'Round the world for birth control, 1920-1966