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Feeling better: representing abortion in 'feminist' television.

Cordelia Freeman
Published in: Culture, health & sexuality (2021)
Abortion is a common and safe gynaecological procedure. Yet in film and television it is disproportionately represented as risky, violent, requiring hospitalisation, and affecting young, white, wealthy women. This reinforces stigma, fear and misunderstanding surrounding the procedure. While the majority of television storylines still inaccurately portray abortion, a small minority are directly showing abortion and presenting it as a positive decision. This paper analyses four such storylines in the television shows Sex Education, Shrill, GLOW and Euphoria, as well as media discourse around these plotlines, to understand how contemporary, 'feminist' television shows are representing abortion. The paper argues that contemporary television is increasingly representing abortion in an empathetic way that upholds women's choice to access the procedure, but that these portrayals can be read as post-feminist. Individual choice and empowerment are prioritised in these shows at the expense of showing the complex and unequal power structures that affect how women make reproductive choices. 'Feminist' television still prioritises the abortion storylines of young, white women who face no obstacles to abortion access and so the realities of abortion are still not fully represented on screen.
Keyphrases
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • healthcare
  • minimally invasive
  • cervical cancer screening
  • high throughput
  • metabolic syndrome
  • middle aged
  • single cell
  • hiv aids
  • hepatitis c virus
  • prefrontal cortex