Madame Restell
Abortion, Secrecy, and the Making of a Public Enemy
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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ALANA SANCHEZ
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Madame Restell was the most famous abortion provider in nineteenth-century America.
She advertised openly in New York newspapers, built a lucrative business serving women in secret, and became a household name—denounced from pulpits, pursued by reformers, and feared by authorities.
In Madame Restell: Abortion, Secrecy, and the Making of a Public Enemy, traces how a single woman came to embody a private market the public refused to acknowledge. Drawing on court records, contemporary reporting, and modern scholarship, this book reconstructs Restell’s rise, her repeated encounters with the law, and the moment when federal power finally moved to destroy her.
This is not a story of lurid detail or easy moral verdicts. It is a rigorously researched work of historical true crime that exposes how secrecy, gender, and authority shaped reproductive life in Victorian America—and how the law learned to punish visibility rather than resolve need.
Clear-eyed, restrained, and deeply unsettling, Madame Restell reveals what happens when a society demands silence from women, then turns one of them into an example.