Abortion, the A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom
Mary Ann Sorrentino
Abortion, the A Word is a wake-up call to all women (and men) who have taken their hard-won personal freedoms for granted.  [Sorrentino] has evoked the faces and fates of the women behind the numbers; she’s told their stories as much as her own. In the process, she’s provided a valuable case-book for pro-choice advocates everywhere.” 
Johnette Rodriguez, the RI Phoenix


August 27, 2007  

Dear friends,
        I’m writing about a book that seems essential for women today,  Abortion, the A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom (Gadd Books: www.gaddbooks.com).
        Author Mary Ann Sorrentino is passionate about preserving reproductive rights and this collection of analysis, criticism and profiles goes a long way in furthering that mission
        More information on Mary Ann Sorrentino and Abortion, the A Word follows.  You’ll find the book’s table of contents, reviews from the Providence Journal and Conscience magazine and a biography of Ms. Sorrentino.  Here are links, too, to reviews of a recent forum on reproductive rights featuring Mary Ann Sorrentino and Kenneth Edelin, MD:
  http://www.mvgazette.com/news/2007/08/10/abortion_panel.php
http://www.mvtimes.com/calendar/2007/08/16/womens_reproductive_rights.php 
       Abortion, the A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom is available for $17.50 from Gadd Books in Great Barrington, MA; through your local bookstore, and on-line.  Moreover, if you’d like to engage Mary Ann Sorrentino for a talk on your campus, please contact me soon and we’ll do our best to make that happen.
        Thank you for your time and consideration.
 
Regards,
Ann C. Landenberger
for Mary Ann Sorrentino




About
Mary Ann Sorrentino
“Ms. Sorrentino, your personal experiences are remarkable and resulted in an exercise of great courage on your part.  I am  in your debt.”   -late US Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun
 
Mary Ann Sorrentino was Executive Director of Planned Parenthood of Rhode Island from 1977-1987 overseeing the first outpatient abortion clinic in Rhode Island, the most Roman Catholic state in the union (65%).  Predictably and of necessity, Sorrentino became, and remains, a leading advocate for reproductive rights and women’s rights in general.
        In 1985, the diocese of Providence tried to prevent Sorrentino’s then 15-year-old daughter from being confirmed, and publicly declared Sorrentino excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church.  This was a first.  Her case is still widely cited by legal and religious scholars and is a benchmark in Canon law. Vindicated by the Canon Law Society of America in 1987, she left Planned Parenthood later that year for what would eventually become a 13-year run as Southern New England’s leading radio talk show host, newspaper columnist and advocate for a human rights.
        Sorrentino has been a frequent speaker on campuses including Boston College, University of Wisconsin, College of the Holy Cross, Brown University, Northeastern University, Hartford College, Middlebury College.  In 2005 and 2006, she spoke at the Harvard School of Public Health in conjunction with a film festival and forum on Reproductive Rights and Religion.  A Communications faculty member at the University of Rhode Island,  Sorrentino is scheduled to teach Abortion--The A Word in the Women’s Studies division next year. 

        Sorrentino’s columns run regularly in Rhode Island (Phoenix (RI)), Massachusetts (Standard Times) and New Hampshire (Keene Sentinel) and periodically in other states across the country.  Her political insights have allowed her to create a following among those who admire her habit of “saying what many others are thinking but may be afraid to say.”  She is an internet blog staple.
            Over the last few decades, Mary Ann Sorrentino’s voice has had a wide reach.  Among a host of credits, she has been…
•       a four-time recipient of the Associated Press Award for Best Talk Show in Southern New England;
•       listed among America’s Top 100 Talk Hosts by Talkers Magazine every year for the last five years of her tenure on Providence’s WPRO, the        
area’s top talk radio station with a reach to Boston, northern New England, Connecticut and New York;
•       a frequent voice on WRKO in Boston in the early 2000s;  a guest on national television including Donahue, Today, Sally Jessey Raffael, CBS
Morning News, CNN, all major network news shows;
•       a feature subject in print media including People, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Redbook, TIME, Newsweek, Reader’s Digest and many
national newspapers;  
•       a frequent guest on talk shows across America and in Europe;  
•       a subject on the  PBS Emmy award-winning documentary “Taking on the Kennedys.” (At that film’s premiere at Boston’s Museum of Fine
Art, her segments roused standing ovations.)
•       featured in the TV documentary, “Vote for Me”;
•       named  by Rhode Islander magazine as one of the state’s “Bulldogs” for advocacy;
•       honored by national NOW, The House of Compassion (AIDS), RI Rape Crisis, Travelers Aid for the Homeless,  RI Department of Health, RI
Monthly Magazine, RI Business and Professional Women,  Survivors’ Network (Catholic survivors of sexual abuse by priests) and Planned
Parenthood for her dedication to human rights causes;
•       one of the “Remarkable People” in the book by that name by photographer Stephan Brigidi;
•       a frequent debater opposite, among others, Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff

        Sorrentino co-authored Sex and Alcohol, published originally in 1983.  In 1986, she presented a paper (in Italian) on Outpatient Female Sterilization at the First Conference on Male and Female Sterilization at the University of Bologna, and she is a contributing author, in Italian, to the published collection resulting from that conference.  She holds a BA in Psychology and English from Elmira College and did graduate-level research in Demography and Economics and the University of Florence (Italy).        
        Well-connected to the political establishment locally and nationally, and with a veteran’s knowledge of the broadcast medium, Sorrentino is a tireless promoter of the issues she believes in and has managed to successfully make her views and her vehicles for expressing them hot commodities.

 




Abortion, the A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom
Abortion.  The debate ensues: Where’s the perspective?
 
“Sorrentino has added a provocative voice to the current debate about how to develop a successful movement for abortion rights. We must build on her vision of linking abortion to other human rights issues, and go beyond legislative advocacy if we are going to effectively protect and expand all women's reproductive choices.” Susan Yanow, Conscience Magazine

        From a sound, frank, highly-qualified point of view, Mary Ann Sorrentino, looks at a broad spectrum of people affected by abortion in Abortion—the A Word:  Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom (Gadd Books: www.gaddbooks.com)
        This is an important text for the media; for lawmakers, policy makers, clergy, health care providers, counselors, women’s rights and human rights advocates, and for students of law, medicine, sociology, religion, social work, public health, nursing, women’s studies.
        The majority of Americans— over sixty percent—support women’s rights to safe and legal abortions, but few women of childbearing age—or the men who love them—can remember life before Roe v. Wade.  Only thirty-four years ago, terminating an unwanted pregnancy was a criminal offense often performed at great risk to the woman’s health.  Sorrentino cautions that unless the majority is heard, each American woman will lose the fundamental right to choose.  As dissenting Justice Ginsburg warns, the recent Supreme Court ruling on late term abortions sounds an alarm for all reproductive rights.  Few today seem to fully grasp the extent of the consequences:  If we don’t act now, the bad old days will return. 
        Abortion—the A Word focuses on those bad old days, and on what we can do to protect a woman’s hard-won right.    
        Sorrentino is one of the most reliable voices on reproductive rights in the US.   Outspoken and articulate, she not only sheds historical perspective, but offers essential, timely analysis of the effects and impact of anti-choice actions around the nation today.

Abortion—The A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom
Contents 
                               
Author’s Note
INTRODUCTION: Why This Book is Necessary

Chapter 1               
WHO ARE THESE WOMEN? Snapshot of Juanita
Chapter 2               
DEHUMANIZING THE WOMAN: Deputizing The Fetus
Chapter 3               
UNINTENDED PREGNANCY: No Easy Choices
Chapter 4               
TEENAGERS, PARENTS AND THE UNIVERSAL CONCERN ABOUT CONSENT  Snapshot of a Recovery Room
Chapter 5               
POVERTY AND LIMITED CHOICES Snapshot of Women on Welfare
Chapter 6               
WHY WE CANNOT GO BACK TO THE BAD OLD DAYS   Snapshot of Matt
Chapter 7                               
MEN’S INVOLVEMENT: Political & Personal Snapshot of the Rev. John Bernard Kent, Norma and me
Chapter 8                               

GOD, WOMEN, MERCY AND HYPOCRISY Snapshot of Child Abuse: Many Different Kinds; Snapshot of a Lawmaker
Chapter 9                               
FANATICS ON BOTH SIDES: The America in the Middle
Chapter 10                             
POLITICS AND ABORTION RIGHTS: Trading Wisdom for Power
Chapter 11                              
GOVERNMENT’S APPROPRIATE ROLE
Chapter 12                      
STEM CELL RESEARCH AND CONTRACEPTION: Preventing Abortions and Giving Life Snapshot of a Senate Hearing; Snapshot of Some Opponents
Chapter 13                     
POST-CHOICE TRUTHS AND MYTHS  Snapshot of a Dallas Airport Meeting
Chapter 14                              
STRAIGHT TALK FOR PRO-CHOICE COLLEAGUES
Chapter 15                              
IF NOT ROE, WHAT?
Afterword                       
RE-LIGHTING THE FIRE IN AMERICA’S BELLY
SUMMARIES OF ROE AND CASEY
Sources
Index



Abortion—The A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom
Sample reviews

Providence Journal Bulletin
Sorrentino: a tireless warrior for abortion rights

01:00 AM EST on Monday, February 5, 2007
By Scott MacKay, Journal Staff Writer

PROVIDENCE — For years, Mary Ann Sorrentino was the human face in Rhode Island of one of the nation’s most contentious issues: legal abortion.           
As the director of the Rhode Island chapter of Planned Parenthood, Sorrentino battled at the State House and the ballot box and ran gauntlet after gauntlet of anti-abortion demonstrators to keep abortion legal in the state and provide the service to women who choose to terminate their pregnancies.      
        Now, Sorrentino has written a book about her experiences and the continuing battle: The A Word: Abortion: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom.

Sorrentino, 63, of Cranston, is well known as a former talk-show host and syndicated columnist, but she says her real passion is campaigning for women’s rights and keeping abortion legal.
        “It is my life’s work,” Sorrentino said last week in an interview over coffee.  
        Her book is not an academic tome. Rather she has written a lively, anecdote-driven and eloquent tribute to the cause she believes in.
        Here’s an excerpt from her first chapter, in which she describes the women she dealt with at Planned Parenthood:
        “Whether the patients were super achievers from the business world, students at a local college or university, homemakers, or single mothers on public assistance, on this day they were truly on the same plane. All the economic social, religious and generational differences between them fell away and they became simply, ‘the abortion patient.’
        “The abortion experience not only equalizes those who go through it, it allows others, not present, to share in the possibility of being, or having been, in the shoes of that day’s patients.
        “Every day across America, women like these lie down on a stretcher, look up at a ceiling, and wait for the medical team to end their pregnancies. Every day this happens to people you know and love. So when you speak of abortion, remember them and bring to mind that woman or women, in your own circle who once existed where these women are now.”
        Sorrentino has been speaking at colleges in an attempt to educate a new generation of women. She worries that the two generations of women who have come of age since the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Roe vs. Wade which legalized abortion have come to take the freedom to terminate a pregnancy for granted.
        “We want young people to have a fire in their belly about this right … which is under assault from the religious right, from [President] Bush, from the Catholic Church,” said Sorrentino. “The niche of this book is college campuses because it is written for these women. I want to light a fire under their butts so we don’t all of a sudden have a South Dakota situation going on in Rhode Island.”
        Sorrentino is the leadoff speaker tomorrow at the 2007 Dana Shugar Spring Colloquium Series, sponsored by the University of Rhode Island Women’s Studies Program. Her speech is scheduled for 5 p.m. in the Galanti Lounge of the URI library.
        Sorrentino is as animated as ever; age has done little to slow her staccato speaking style or her activism. She conjures up images of her Italian-American upbringing in Providence’s Mount Pleasant neighborhood in one breath, and in the next is discussing speech patterns reminiscent of writer George Orwell’s famous essay “Politics and the English Language.”
        The anti-abortion movement has, Sorrentino says, gotten very smart of late, especially in the way it has controlled the language of the debate. “Partial birth abortion, that’s a brilliant term but it has no medical meaning and it certainly more attention-grabbing than late-term abortion. ... ‘Right to life’ is a very powerful term, while ‘pro-choice’ sounds defensive.
        “The anti-abortion movement is brilliant and very committed. These people aren’t going anywhere,” said Sorrentino.
        She became known nationally during the 1980s when she was excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church. While she doesn’t like to revisit that issue, she acknowledges that it left a wound. When asked why she didn’t switch to another Christian church that allows its adherents to have abortions, Sorrentino said, “I’m an ethnic Italian Catholic, that is who I am.”
        The burgeoning sexual-abstinence movement — endorsed by the Bush administration and conservative Christians — especially rattles Sorrentino. “I have a granddaughter and I hope she never smokes a joint and finds someone to love, doesn’t have sex before marriage and gets married to a wonderful man who loves her and has children.        
        “But I’m 63 years old and I know what’s out there in terms of peer pressure and values. We’ve had 2,000 years of experience with abstinence, and speeches by Jerry Falwell, the Pope and George Bush are no match for the racing hormones of a 15-year-old with a snort of crystal meth or a slug of vodka.”

“I’ve been around long enough to know that the world is not how I’d like it to be,” Sorrentino said. “I’m still going to be passing out condoms because that is the way the world is.”  
        The politics of abortion, Sorrentino argues, is too important to be left to political figures and elected officials. “The path to political glory is paved with photo opportunities,” she writes. “We see candidates kissing babies, embracing old ladies at bingo games, handing out scholarship checks … nowhere in the campaign manuals on ‘How to Guarantee Victory at the Polls’ does one expect to see advice urging potential winners to spend their days escorting abortion patients into clinics surrounded by opponents of those services.”

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A provocative voice with a vision.(The A Word--Abortion: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom )(Book review)
Publication Date: 22-JUN-07
Publication Title:
Conscience
Format: Online
Author: Yanow, Susan
Full Article

 

The A Word--Abortion: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom Mary Ann Sorrentino (Gadd Books, 2006, 224pp) 0977405338, $17.50

THE MAJORITY OF AMERICANS continue to support keeping abortion legal, and one in three U.S. women will have an abortion at some time during her life. But polls show that many Americans are willing to impose restrictions on women's right to choose. Most state legislatures have anti-choice majorities, reflecting an electorate that appears increasingly ambivalent about abortion. Many national pro-choice organizations are reacting to this political climate by changing their messages to focus on prevention and contraception.
The A Word opens with a direct challenge to this strategy. Mary Ann Sorrentino, who was the executive director of Planned Parenthood of Rhode Island from 1977 to 1987, identifies the issue of abortion as fundamentally about real women and their right to personhood. Having seen the cost of illegal abortion and watched the erosion of access to abortion since Roe v. Wade, Sorrentino casts The A Word as a call to action by a woman with a deep history in the abortion debate. Sorrentino was a pioneer in the days when only 20 Planned Parenthood affiliates nationwide, including hers, provided abortion services, and this history informs her passion.

The author's stated goal is to inspire the reader with a new or renewed understanding of the women at the core of the reproductive fights debate, in order to motivate new generations of women and men to fight for abortion rights. Sorrentino provides an overview of the abortion issue and rebuttals to many common anti-choice arguments, interspersed with her personal experiences defending abortion on the front lines. The A Word includes chapters that, in straightforward language, dispel the myth of the "solution" of adoption, discuss the role of men in the abortion decision, and capture the stories of some of the women who have chosen abortion as their solution to unwanted pregnancy. Through these stories, The A Word returns the experiences of real women to the forefront of the abortion debate.

Sorrentino focuses a clear eye on how women's lives have been eclipsed in the abortion conversation, because anti-choice zealots have elevated the position of the fetus above more than 50 percent of the living humans in the United States. She accurately identifies this focus on the fetus as a core tool used to mobilize conservative voters, and identifies how the promotion of the fetus over living people plays out in the current struggle over stem cell research. She describes the surge of laws that seek to protect the fetus by criminalizing the behavior of pregnant women, and how these laws dehumanize pregnant women by making their right to health secondary to that of the potential life that they are carrying. In several parts of her book, Sorrentino highlights the irony that, while using every resource possible to protect the unborn, state and federal governments have slashed spending on child welfare and maternal health.

The book becomes less incisive as Sorrentino suggests next steps for the movement. On the one hand, she argues for tenacious advocacy for legislation that protects abortion rights, and shares her own successful work in confronting the heavily Catholic legislature in Rhode Island. She states that the lack of federal legislation banning abortion points to the lack of national will to further restrict abortion, and that pro-choice advocates must push "our" politicians to step out on the abortion issue. This position overlooks a number of significant anti-choice laws and regulations passed by Congress recently. The Weldon Amendment, attached to a 2005 appropriations bill, creates conflicts with existing state laws that mandate aspects of abortion (for example, that require that certain abortions be funded from state coffers) by allowing health care providers to refuse to be involved in any way in an abortion. Two states are suing to overturn this amendment, but it remains in effect. Restrictions passed on the use of federal Title X funds deny women access to abortion at many community health centers. The Teen Endangerment Act (also called the Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act or Child Custody Protection Act) would make it a federal crime for any person other than a parent to help a young woman travel to another state to obtain an abortion if she has not complied with the forced parental involvement law of her home state. It also would impose a federal parental notification and mandatory delay requirement when a young woman seeks an abortion outside her state of residence. Different versions of the bill have passed both the House and the Senate. In the face of these laws, it is difficult to argue, as Sorrentino does, that a winning strategy is to pressure Congress to advocate for pro-choice legislation, unless, of course, all three branches of government are controlled by pro-choice majorities.

In a more controversial vein, Sorrentino urges "pro-choice extremists" to move away from advocacy for access to later abortions, identifying the public discourse on the "partial-birth" abortion ban as harmful to the pro-choice movement. Although she may be correct that the debate on late abortions has eroded support for abortion rights, this is because the movement has not adequately developed and promoted a broader vision that keeps the lives and human rights of women at the forefront. Sorrentino starts with a strong focus on women, but then develops her arguments in ways that ultimately exclude some of the most vulnerable women, those who need later abortions.

Sorrentino does advocate a Maternal Child Health Initiative that incorporates the right to abortion, the right to medical care and the right to not be victimized. This presents an important alternative to current strategies that focus on prevention or the rights of the fetus, and links the fight to abortion to the right to have healthy children and safe families. However, Sorrentino's proposal could be even more inclusive. A reproductive justice framework that is built on the human rights of all women in our country to health, safety, the right to bear and raise children and the right to abortion--and that makes explicit how race and class intersect with these issues--would lead to a more comprehensive strategy for mobilizing support for the issues that Sorrentino cares about. This framework would move beyond a legislative strategy and beyond the current political climate, embracing a long-term vision that could build a broad organizing base that includes all women, including the young and low-income women who seek to end later pregnancies.

Sorrentino has added a provocative voice to the current debate about how to develop a successful movement for abortion rights. We must build on her vision of linking abortion to other human rights issues, and go beyond legislative advocacy if we are going to effectively protect and expand all women's reproductive choices.

SUSAN YANOW, LICSW, is a long-time reproductive rights activist, co-founder of the Abortion Access Project, the Boston Reproductive Rights Network, the Training and Access Working Group, and the Hospital Access Collaborative. She now works as consultant to a number of reproductive rights organizations.

Abortion—The A Word: Real Women, Tough Choices, Personal Freedom
 
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