Famine, Contraception and the Origins of Overpopulation: Rethinking Historical Connections

Dr. Mytheli Sreenivas
May 15, 2012
4:30 pm - 5:30 pm
038 Townshend Hall

Date Range
2012-05-15 16:30:00 2012-05-15 17:30:00 Famine, Contraception and the Origins of Overpopulation: Rethinking Historical Connections Dr. Mytheli Sreenivas, Associate Prof. History, Women’s Studies, Ohio StateTo trace a history of ideas about overpopulation, this paper focuses on two pivotal events in the nineteenth-century British Empire: a massive famine in southern India (1876-1878), and the criminal prosecution of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh (1877) for disseminating information about contraception in England. I consider how each of these events contributed to a popular conviction that India was an overpopulated place, despite the fact that empirically, population growth rates were negligible. Within this context of perceived overpopulation, activists like Annie Besant argued that contraception was a social good, and a sign of the supposed superiority of British civilization. I suggest, finally, that these interconnections between famine, contraception, and overpopulation had important legacies for twentieth century population control programs, and more broadly, for how we might consider the relationship between global population and reproductive justice today. 038 Townshend Hall America/New_York public

Dr. Mytheli Sreenivas, Associate Prof. History, Women’s Studies, Ohio State

To trace a history of ideas about overpopulation, this paper focuses on two pivotal events in the nineteenth-century British Empire: a massive famine in southern India (1876-1878), and the criminal prosecution of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh (1877) for disseminating information about contraception in England. I consider how each of these events contributed to a popular conviction that India was an overpopulated place, despite the fact that empirically, population growth rates were negligible. Within this context of perceived overpopulation, activists like Annie Besant argued that contraception was a social good, and a sign of the supposed superiority of British civilization. I suggest, finally, that these interconnections between famine, contraception, and overpopulation had important legacies for twentieth century population control programs, and more broadly, for how we might consider the relationship between global population and reproductive justice today.