Norma Meras Swenson (born 1932) is an activist, a medical sociologist and a leader in the developing woman's health movement. She co-founded the Boston Women's Health Book Collective (BWHBC), and co-authored with the Collective, Our Bodies, Ourselves (OBOS), and served as president of the OBOS nonprofit organization for several years. Swenson was OBOS's first Director of International Programs, which supported the translation and/or adaptation and dissemination of the book into more than 30 languages. [1] She continues to provide support to women's groups and maternal health clinics [2] by assisting women-led organizations that work for social change in maternity care, in reproductive justice, and in healthcare-related human rights. OBOS has impacted women's health in Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe, the United States and Canada. [3] Swenson consults with national governments, private foundations and organizations, including the World Health Organization. [4]
Norma Meras Swenson's papers are a part of the Records of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective collection at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University. [5]
Swenson graduated from the Girls' Latin School, now called the Boston Latin Academy, in 1949. [6] A graduate of Tufts University, Swenson studied medical sociology, and subsequently won a Danforth Foundation Fellowship to work with the medical sociologist Irving Zola at Brandeis University. Swenson earned an M.P.H (Master of Public Health) from the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH).[ citation needed ]
Her career in Public Health focused on the improvement of women's health care through education and global community organization to provide equal health care for women. She believes that education is the key to breaking down walls of inequality. [1] Her reform efforts in maternal healthcare began in the 1960s at the Boston Association for Childbirth Education and carried throughout her career. She currently continues to advise this group as a board member. [4] Swenson also served as the President of the International Association for Childbirth Education. [7] In the 1980s, Swenson served on the board of the National Women's Health Collective. [7]
After receiving her Master of Public Health degree, Swenson taught medical and graduate students about health, gender and sexuality in her course “Women, Health, and Development From a Global Perspective" in the Social and Behavioral Sciences Departments at HSPH for over 20 years. [3] At Harvard, she served on the HSPH Alumni Council, and is a founding member and former faculty in the concentration on women, gender, and health. [8]
Swenson is an Affiliate of the Women Gender & Sexuality program at Harvard's Faculty of Arts & Sciences, and a member of the group on Reproductive Health and Rights at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies. [9] She participated in an interdisciplinary course, Gender, Health, and Marginalization, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)'s Graduate Consortium of Women’s Studies. [2]
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, a time when women were meeting in groups across the country to share and expose injustices in their lives, Norma Swenson, a medical sociologist, and Nancy Miriam Hawley, a social worker, began meeting at their kitchen tables in Boston with other women about their health, their experiences with healthcare, questions about sexuality and their bodies only to discover many shared similar frustrations and misinformation. [10] The group grew to 12 women who spent an entire summer researching the answers to the list of medical questions they developed. They were inspired to share their research findings in a 193-page booklet, published by New England Free Press, and a course called Women and Their Bodies , which led directly to the first commercial edition of Our Bodies, Ourselves in 1971, published byh Random House, later editions by Simon & Schuster. [11]
Swenson also utilized her knowledge on topics such as sexuality, childbirth, menopause, housing, work, retirement, money, care giving, medical problems, and death to contribute to books such as Ourselves, Growing Older (viewed from the perspective of the older woman in OBOS). [12] In addition to Our Bodies, Ourselves , she contributed to editions of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective's other publications including guide for aging women: Ourselves Growing Older: Women Aging with Knowledge and Power. [2]
The film She's Beautiful When She's Angry explains the history of the women who founded the modern women's movement from 1966 to 1971. The movie moves from the founding of NOW, with women in hats and gloves, to the beginning of more radical groups of women's liberation. She's Beautiful When She's Angry articulates the stories of 30 individual women and the Our Bodies Ourselves collective, all of which fought for their own equality and in the process created a revolution. [13] Created by filmmaker Mary Dore, She's Beautiful When She's Angry is the first film about second-wave feminism to illustrate clearly the distinctions between what became the global women's health movement and how, as a movement, OBOS was somewhat closer to the heart of women's liberation than to mainstream feminism at the time. Rather than celebrating "girl power," Dore illustrates an honest, critical, and inclusive image of the history of second wave feminism. [14] "It explains the place of Our Bodies, Ourselves in providing a feminist guide to women's health and medical care, while providing a bibliography for who was organizing and how to organize for both local and national change." [15]
Swenson's mother was eight years old when women won the right to vote and electricity came to the immigrant farming community where she was born. By the time Swenson became a mother, she was president of a women’s rights organization. Thus, why Swenson feels, "one of the high points of She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry is the tribute paid and the link made to that first wave, which started with such a sweeping agenda and ended after less than a century with the single, narrow goal of giving women the right to vote." [16] Official website: www.NormaMerasSwenson.weebly.com
Our Bodies, Ourselves is a book about women's health and sexuality produced by the nonprofit organization Our Bodies Ourselves. First published in 1970, it contains information related to many aspects of women's health and sexuality, including: sexual health, sexual orientation, gender identity, birth control, abortion, pregnancy and childbirth, violence and abuse, and menopause. The most recent edition of the book was published in 2011. The book was revolutionary in that it encouraged women to celebrate their sexuality, including chapters on reproductive rights, lesbian sexuality, and sexual independence. Its emphasis on women's active engagement with their actual sexual desires stood in contrast to the societal notion of the role of "women as docile and passive," and "men as active and aggressive" in a sexual relationship.
OBOS may stand for:
Barbara Seaman was an American author, feminist activist, and journalist, and a principal founder of the women's health movement.
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Mary Catherine Raugust Howell was a physician, psychologist, lawyer, mentor, musician and mother. She was the first woman dean at Harvard Medical School (1972-1975) and led the fight to end quotas and open medical schools to women.
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Fran P. Hosken was an American designer, writer, feminist, and social activist. She founded the Women's International Network in 1975, and published a quarterly journal on women's health issues that became known, in particular, for its research into female genital mutilation (FGM).
Tamara Eugenia Awerbuch-Friedlander was an Uruguay-born Israeli-American biomathematician and public health scientist who worked at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) in Boston, Massachusetts. Her primary research and publications focus on biosocial interactions that cause or contribute to disease. She also is believed to be the first female Harvard faculty member to have had a jury trial for a lawsuit filed against Harvard University for sex discrimination.
Trans Bodies, Trans Selves: A Resource for the Transgender Community is a 2014 non-fiction book published by Oxford University Press. Edited by psychiatrist Laura Erickson-Schroth, it covers health and wellness for transgender and gender non-conforming people. It was a 27th Lambda Literary Awards finalist in the Transgender Non-Fiction category and won a 2015 Achievement Award from GLMA: Healthcare Professionals for LGBT Equality. A second edition was published in 2022.
She's Beautiful When She's Angry is a 2014 American documentary film about some of the women involved in the second wave feminism movement in the United States. It was directed by Mary Dore and co-produced by Nancy Kennedy. It was the first documentary film to cover feminism's second wave.
Nancy Miriam Hawley is an activist and feminist who contributed to the founding of Our Bodies, Ourselves. She also serves as a co-author of Ourselves and Our Children, and a publisher of You and Your Partner, Inc: Entrepreneurial Couples Succeeding in Business, Life and Love, in which she teamed up with her husband to publish. Hawley is also a clinical social worker, group therapist, principal clinical social worker for the Cambridge Hospital of Harvard Medical School, an organizational consultant and coach to business executives, and CEO of Enlightenment, Inc. She has worked with the Boston Women's Health Book Collective's board to help create ways to influence future health related issues.
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Susan Cayleff is an American academic and emeritus professor at San Diego State University, having taught there from 1987 to 2020. She was one the inaugural members of the National Women's Studies Association Lesbian Caucus and served on the organization's Coordinating Council between 1977 and 1979. She founded the Women's History Seminar Series at the University of Texas Medical Branch, in Galveston, Texas; the Graduate Women's Scholars of Southern California in 1989; and was a co-founder of the SafeZones program at San Diego State University.