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Zgodovina za vse

“If They All Lived, Rancerbar Would Be Full Of Children!” The case of Filomena Permoser, abortion provider


Author(s):Jaša Drnovšek
Year:2022
Publisher(s):Zgodovinsko društvo Celje, Celje
Language(s):slovenščina, angleščina
Type(s) of material:text
Rights:
CC license

This work by Jaša Drnovšek is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

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The author discusses the work of Filomena Permoser (1899-1968), who performed abortions at her home in Cerknica from the mid-1930s onwards. First, he sheds light on the chain of knowledge transfer, which already involved his father Ferdinand Permoser (1859-ca. 1944), who learned to perform abortions in the USA at the beginning of the century. The author reconstructs the decades-long activities of Filomena Permoser, as revealed by surviving criminal files, media reports and field findings. While the profile of Filomena Permoser in the criminal files largely corresponds to the stereotype that Western culture created of abortion providers in the first half of the 20th century, the narrative of the informants, who knew Filomena Permoser personally and who also know the memories of several other fellow citizens of the country, paints a very different picture.
Metadata (11)
  • identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/11686/58175
    • title
      • "Če bi vsi vstali, bi bil polhn Rancerebar otruk!" : primer Filomene Permoser, izvajalke splavov
      • “If They All Lived, Rancerbar Would Be Full Of Children!” The case of Filomena Permoser, abortion provider
    • creator
      • Jaša Drnovšek
    • subject
      • Filomena Permoser
      • Ferdinand Permoser
      • zgodovina splava
      • 20. stoletje
      • ilegalni splavi
      • Filomena Permoser
      • Ferdinand Permoser
      • history of abortion
      • 20th century
      • illegal abortions
    • description
      • The author discusses the work of Filomena Permoser (1899-1968), who performed abortions at her home in Cerknica from the mid-1930s onwards. First, he sheds light on the chain of knowledge transfer, which already involved his father Ferdinand Permoser (1859-ca. 1944), who learned to perform abortions in the USA at the beginning of the century. The author reconstructs the decades-long activities of Filomena Permoser, as revealed by surviving criminal files, media reports and field findings. While the profile of Filomena Permoser in the criminal files largely corresponds to the stereotype that Western culture created of abortion providers in the first half of the 20th century, the narrative of the informants, who knew Filomena Permoser personally and who also know the memories of several other fellow citizens of the country, paints a very different picture.
    • publisher
      • Zgodovinsko društvo Celje
    • date
      • 2022
      • 01. 05. 2022
    • type
      • besedilo
    • language
      • Slovenščina
      • Angleščina
    • isPartOf
    • rights
      • license: ccByNcSa
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