Tampons. Breast pumps. Forceps. These tools have vastly improved reproductive health, and yet they’re rarely seen as great works of design.
At a time when abortion access is being curtailed around the country, the exhibit offers clues about how design might help women circumvent the system and regain some measure of control over their bodies—but also about how limited these design interventions are without systemic change.
Since women haven’t felt comfortable talking about issues like ending a pregnancy, vaginal tearing during childbirth, and nipple pain from breastfeeding, there hasn’t been a concerted effort to develop solutions. Often women have had to band together to design products themselves, using whatever tools they have at their disposal.
“We pitched it and pitched it, and everybody said it was too ‘niche’ a topic or it was a ‘woman’s issue,'” Millar Fisher says, noting that it was only when she received the support of nonprofits devoted to childbirth—including the Maternity Care Coalition in Philadelphia and the Neighborhood Birth Center in Boston—that the project got off the ground and MIT Press agreed to publish it.
For instance, there’s an early tampon manufactured by Tampax in 1936. During World War II, Kimberly-Clark developed a material called Cellucotton to absorb soldiers’ blood. Nurses on the battlefield realized they could use it for their periods, which spurred several companies to produce pads and tampons from the material.
In many other cases, women have had to work together privately to solve problems. A large part of the exhibit is devoted to midwives, who have been responsible for delivering babies for most of human history.
In the U.S., the practice was often rooted in the wisdom of Indigenous and Black women. (It wasn’t until the 20th century that childbirth was relocated from the home to the hospital, where it was presided over by doctors who were predominantly white men.) These women developed breathing techniques to ease labor pains and came up with hygiene practices, such as cleaning surfaces with alcohol, that are still used today.
The exhibit features a 1953 film calledAll My Babies, which was commissioned by the Georgia Department of Public Health as a training aid for midwives. It shows how Black midwives provided critical care to poor, rural women across the South and delivered babies at home. It also shows two births.“It’s perhaps my favorite part of the entire exhibit,” Millar Fisher says. “The director was inspired by the work of Italian neorealist directors, and shot using nonprofessional actors.”
The shift from midwifery to hospitals underscores another big theme of this exhibit, which has to do with the way government policy intimately influences women’s bodies and how life is brought into the world. Take, for instance, the concept of the “baby box.” Starting in 1938, the Finnish government provided low-income people with a cardboard box with all the things they’d need after giving birth. This included everything from clothes and books to postpartum underwear for recovering mothers.In 2017, the Scottish government developed a similar box to be given to every single baby born in the country. “This is an example of great design, since the box itself can be used as a crib,” says Juliana Barton, who helped curate the exhibit. “But it also reveals that design comes in the form of good policy. Government plays a central role in every part of the reproductive journey.”
This couldn’t be more true in our present moment, with the overturning ofRoe v. Wade. There’s a device from 1971—at the very start of the exhibit—that reveals the lengths to which women had to go to take control over their bodies before abortion was legal. It’s a glass jam jar, with a valved syringe that serves as a low-cost abortion device. It was developedbefore Roe was passedin 1973, at a time when women in the U.S. and around the world were fighting for access to abortion. It was used in the early weeks of pregnancy by inserting a tube into the cervix using a speculum until it reached the uterus. By activating the syringe plunger, it created a vacuum, which would extract the contents of the womb into the jar.“As the exhibition points out, design is not just about objects,” Millar Fisher says. “It is also systems that impact how we live our lives.”
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