Through nostalgic idealizations of motherhood, family, and the
home, influential leaders in early twentieth-century America
constructed and legitimated a range of reforms that promoted human
reproduction. Their pronatalism emerged from a modernist conviction
that reproduction and population could be regulated. European
countries sought to regulate or encourage reproduction through
legislation; America, by contrast, fostered ideological and
cultural ideas of pronatalism through what Laura Lovett calls
"nostalgic modernism," which romanticized agrarianism and promoted
scientific racism and eugenics.
Lovett looks closely at the ideologies of five influential American
figures: Mary Lease's maternalist agenda, Florence Sherbon's
eugenic "fitter families" campaign, George Maxwell's "homecroft"
movement of land reclamation and home building, Theodore
Roosevelt's campaign for conservation and country life, and Edward
Ross's sociological theory of race suicide and social control.
Demonstrating the historical circumstances that linked agrarianism,
racism, and pronatalism, Lovett shows how reproductive conformity
was manufactured, how it was promoted, and why it was coercive. In
addition to contributing to scholarship in American history, gender
studies, rural studies, and environmental history, Lovett's study
sheds light on the rhetoric of "family values" that has regained
currency in recent years.