10 Quotes & Sayings By Katha Pollitt

Katha Pollitt is a columnist for the "Boston Globe" and the author of outlets including "The Nation," "Salon," and "Harper's." In 2005, she won a Pulitzer Prize for her columns on women's health, reproductive rights, and the politics of abortions. She has been a Guggenheim Fellow, a fellow at Harvard University's Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, a columnist on the Op-Ed page of "The New York Times," and a regular on NPR's "Weekend Edition." Her writing has been translated into numerous languages around the globe. Her books include: Pro: Reclaiming Abortion Rights; The Death of the Girlfriend; The Good Men Project; The Subjection of Women; A I Love You If You Dare; The New York Times Book Review Bestseller, The Big Necessity; and The End of Men: And How Women Will Change America.

1
Pregnancy and childbirth are not only physical and medical experiences, after all. They are also social experiences that, in modern America, just as when abortion was criminalized in the 1870s, serve to restrict women's ability to participate in society on equal footing with men. Katha Pollitt
2
Why must the woman apologize for not having a baby just because she happened to get pregnant? It's as if we think motherhood is the default setting for a woman's life from first period to menopause, and she needs a note from God not to say yes to every zygote that knocks on her door. Katha Pollitt
3
Our society encourages women to place a very high value on maternity as an essential part of female identity, both a high moral calling and the deepest source of satisfaction on earth. It's not easy to redefine motherhood as handing your baby over to a stranger. Katha Pollitt
4
We may revere motherhood, the hazy abstraction, the cream-of-wheat-with-a-halo ideal, but a mother is just a kind of woman, after all, and women are trouble and not so valuable. Low-income mothers drag down the country–why'd they have kids if they couldn't support them? Middle-class mothers are boring frumps. Elite ones are obsessed sanctimommies. Katha Pollitt
5
There had always been a little wiggle room in state abortion laws, because doctors were still permitted to perform them for “therapeutic” reasons–to save a woman’s life, for example.7 But what did that mean, exactly? An amicus curiae brief in Roe from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and several other medical groups observed that “a woman suffering from heart disease, diabetes or cancer whose pregnancy worsens the underlying pathology may be denied a medically indicated therapeutic abortion under the statute because death is not certain. Katha Pollitt
6
I think the meaning of abortion is what the woman says it is: For a woman who wants a child but can't have this one, it can be sad; for a woman who doesn't want a baby, it can feel like a huge relief, like having your whole life given back to you. Katha Pollitt
7
If you have been vaccinated for polio, mumps, measles, chicken pox, hepatitis, or rabies, it may be too late for you to stand your ethical ground: You have already benefited from fetal-tissue research. This is, after all, a practice that's been legal since the 1930s. Katha Pollitt
8
Ariel may look a lot like Barbie, and her adventure may be limited to romance and over with the wedding bells, but unlike, say, Cinderella or Sleeping Beauty, she's active, brave and determined, the heroine of her own life. She even rescues the prince. And that makes her a rare fish, indeed, in the world of preschool culture. Katha Pollitt
9
Sure, men like a challenge - but so do women. And nobody likes to be challenged all the time. I know plenty of long-standing happy couples who slept together right away, spent hours yakking on the phone, split checks down the middle, and lived together for years before the wedding. Katha Pollitt