Abortion: The Antithesis of Womanhood?
Creator
Timpson, Joanne
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Advanced Nursing. 1996 Apr; 23(4): 776-785.
Abstract
The debate regarding the practice and role of abortion has been an enduring and problematic area of discourse within the nursing literature, with a tendency towards a polarized and inevitably simplistic analysis of what, for many practitioners, women and families, remains a highly complex and morally fraught concept. This paper attempts to explore the concept of abortion from within a feminist epistemology, to present a review of the literature as regards women's reproductive health and responsibilities, and thereby to contribute to the process of better understanding the role of abortion within contemporary health care practice. In order to facilitate the study it has been necessary to explore the wide spectrum of historical, philosophical, legal, moral and political imperatives pertaining to the meaning of abortion as represented within contemporary society, not only in relation to women and their reproductive health, but to feminism, women's well-being and self-determinism per se.
Date
1996-04Subject
Abortion; Autonomy; Contraception; Discrimination; Ethics; Females; Feminism; Health; Health Care; Health Services; Human Body; International Aspects; Legal Aspects; Life; Literature; Mortality; Mothers; Parent Child Relationship; Pregnant Women; Reproduction; Review; Rights; Responsibilities; Social Control; Social Discrimination; Value of Life; Women's Health; Women's Health Services;
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Abortion: The Antithesis of Womanhood?
Timpson, Joanne (1996-04)