Colonialism & Sexual Health

Written and researched by Tomei Kuehl.
Accompanying artworks selected in partnership with Talia Cardin, youth facilitator to the Youth Sexual Health Program Board.

The Pleasure is All Yours, But My Body is Not

by an anonymous student at AUL Denver

“The nude woman is placed in a secret garden to show that consent is the key to the reveal.

Eyes are the window to the soul and mind. I placed an eye over her vagina because the vagina is the window of life.”

 

Colonialism:

“The system, policy, or practice of occupation and control of one people by another enabling domination and subjugation through political, economic, or educational status.”

–  Definition from the Resistance to Forced Sterilization Curriculum, November 2016


 

Forced sterilization is a colonizing tool used by the U.S. government for hundreds of years to exercise control over women, Native American, Puerto Rican, Black, poor, and disenfranchised communities. The U.S. government forced Native peoples onto reservations and asserted its colonial powers by criminalizing Native healers and the birthing knowledge of midwives. The Family Planning Services and Population Research Act of 1970 subsidized sterilizations and it is estimated that at least 25% of Native American women of childbearing age were sterilized (Lawrence, 2000). Many of these were done without consent or the women’s knowledge. 

Modern gynecology also has its roots in colonialism. In the 1950s, Gregory Pincus conducted the first large-scale human trials of the modern contraceptive pill on Puerto Rican women, without clear consent. Pincus intentionally chose Puerto Rico for his experiments because colonization by the U.S. created high levels of poverty among Puerto Ricans. Many women who participated did not understand the risks of taking the drugs and some did not know they were part of a randomized trial. Ironically, despite the contribution Puerto Rican women made to the pill’s development, Puerto Rican women could not access the safer version on the market because it was initially only prescribed to those who were married on the mainland United States (Sowemimo, 2021).


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