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Without Malice
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Cynthia Gorney's new history
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of the conflict over abortion could serve as an advertisement for an imperiled
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form of journalism: the long, meticulously researched narrative of ideas in
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which unglamorous noncelebrities drive the action. If that sounds off-puttingly
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worthy even to devotees of serious nonfiction, then too bad for us. Some of the
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best journalism of the last quarter-century or so belongs to the same
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genre--Jane Kramer's and John McPhee's and William Finnegan's work for The
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New Yorker and nearly all the late Anthony Lukas' writing. It is getting
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harder to do for the very reasons it is worth doing: It can require years of
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reporting, which doesn't sit well with the keepers of our buzz-driven
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publishing culture. It demands of its practitioners a quality of
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listening--even, alert, self-effacing--that seems increasingly rare in this
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first-person age. It doesn't sell a whole lot of ad space.
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None of
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this is to say that narrative nonfiction is some sort of selfless or inherently
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democratic form. It's not oral history; the author is there on every page, as
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enticed by vanity as any journalist is--maybe more so, because his is the kind
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of journalism that aspires most nakedly to the status of literature. But at
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least these writers confer a kind of dignity on their subjects, if only by
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attending so closely to people's own explanations of what they believe. And
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when it comes to showing us the means by which everyday people are taken up by
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history, how they shape it and are in turn shaped by it, there is no genre more
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accommodating.
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In this tradition and with scrupulous fairness, Articles
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of Faith brings to life the arguments and experiences of sympathetic
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characters on opposite sides of a great moral divide. Gorney's setting is
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Missouri, which, as a microcosm for the history of abortion and the opposition
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to it over the last three decades, is an arbitrary choice; she seems to have
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chosen it mainly because her editors at the Washington Post sent her
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there in the late 1980s. In the end, though, the conceit works--partly because
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St. Louis was the site of the first sit-ins at abortion clinics; partly because
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it was a Missouri law restricting access to abortion that inspired one of the
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Supreme Court's most important post- Roe cases, William L. Webster vs.
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Reproductive Health Services ; partly because we are primed to think of
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almost any Midwestern state as "typical" in a way that New York or California
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is not; and mostly because Gorney found two such fundamentally appealing
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characters there.
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On one
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side is Judith Widdicombe, an obstetrical nurse who volunteers at a suicide
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hotline and can't help noticing how many of the women calling in are
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pregnant--and desperate about it. This is the late 1960s, abortion is illegal
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and dangerous, and at the hospitals where Widdicombe works she has seen women
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bleeding and blue-white with shock in the aftermath of botched
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abortions--terrified women, dying women. And so Widdicombe, "a big, smart,
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opinionated woman" with two young sons, a sweet, shy husband who runs a
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newspaper delivery route, and a modest little pea green house in a nice
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neighborhood, begins, systematically, to break the law. It is Widdicombe who
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eventually runs the abortion underground in pre- Roe Missouri, telling
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women where they can find somebody relatively clean and relatively safe to
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terminate their pregnancies and sometimes smuggling them into her own spare
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bedroom afterward to suffer the aftereffects of the operations in
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clenched-teeth pain. And it is Widdicombe who, in the wake of Roe vs.
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Wade , opens the first abortion clinic in the state, the Reproductive Health
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Services of Webster fame. "This was women's business," is how Gorney
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describes Widdicombe's thinking about what she does. "And, if you were a nurse
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who took care of women--for that was how Judy thought of her work in labor and
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delivery, the care of women--you did what they needed you to do, you helped
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them have the baby or not have the baby, they came to you in crisis, and you
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eased them to the next place. Either way, it was a kind of delivery."
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On the other side is Samuel Lee, a would-be
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seminarian with a ragged beard and the look of "an Old Testament prophet or a
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Russian monk." Lee is a pacifist and an intellectually serious one. In 1978,
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inspired by the civil-rights movement and his reading of Gandhi, Lee dreams up
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and then organizes the first sit-ins at an abortion clinic, and so helps to
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steer the anti-abortion movement from its polite letter-writing phase to its
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angry street-theater phase. Lee is convinced that no one has proposed a more
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logical time for "the moment of an individual person's beginning" than the
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joining of egg and sperm for the simple reason that there is no more logical
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time. He compares his moral duty to rail against abortion to his moral duty to
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intervene if he saw a man on the street beating his child with a club. He is a
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purist but not a fanatic.
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One
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virtue of having chosen these particular characters--a gruff, empathetic nurse
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instead of a polished, pro-choice lobbyist; a thoughtful, vaguely leftish
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Catholic as opposed to a fire-breathing evangelic--is that we can live with
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them for 500 pages or so. But, implicitly, the choice serves a more didactic
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purpose as well. Articles of Faith makes it abundantly clear that even
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the most decent people both sides have to offer--people such as Widdicombe and
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Lee who will occasionally talk to each other instead of merely hurling
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epithets--can find no real common ground on abortion. Whatever compromise
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Americans come to on abortion won't be the product of a warm and fuzzy dialogue
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between pro-choice and pro-life activists. (It is more likely to emerge out of
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what polls show most nonactivists on the issue believe, namely, that abortion
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should be, as the slogan goes, "safe, legal, and rare." Call it muddled or call
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it nuanced, but most Americans seem to want to preserve the right to abortion,
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pretty much unrestricted, in the first three months, and to allow states to
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limit it sharply thereafter. They want abortion to be legal, but they think too
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many people seek it out for the wrong reasons.) As Gorney notes, the
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well-meaning organization known as Common Ground Network for Life and Choice, a
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national project that brings pro-choice and pro-life activists together in
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discussion circles and makes mediators available to help resolve their
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differences, has succeeded mainly in inflaming partisans on both sides while
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producing "extremely modest tangible results."
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The other advantage of this sort of textured narrative is
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that it inevitably turns up bits of the past that more ideological accounts
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leave out. Gorney gives us a fascinating glimpse, for example, of the
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involvement of the clergy in helping women obtain illegal abortions in the late
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'60s. Widdicombe herself worked for something called the Clergy Referral
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Service, a network of some 1,000 Protestant ministers across the country who
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decided it was their pastoral duty to shepherd unhappily pregnant women to
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underground doctors willing to perform abortions. (They took their lead from
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the Rev. Howard Moody, a liberal and outspoken Baptist who occupied the pulpit
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at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village.) This is the kind of history
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that pro-lifers don't care to discuss, because it suggests the existence of a
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moral, as well as a political, dimension to abortion rights. The idea that some
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men of God might regard their commitment to a woman housing a fetus as more
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important than their commitment to the fetus itself is anathema to people like
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Lee. And pro-choicers are likely to ignore the abortion-abetting ministers
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because their own history of the movement puts feminist activists more or less
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alone on center stage.
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There are drawbacks to any
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journalistic genre that requires the writer to stick to one or two main story
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lines. (Gorney introduces us to hundreds of other activists, but it is
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Widdicombe and Lee who propel the narrative.) Since Widdicombe is apparently so
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much less given to moral casuistry than Lee, Gorney sometimes risks leaving us
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with a vague impression of abortion-rights activists as tough pragmatists at a
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loss for loftier arguments, and anti-abortion activists as philosophers with a
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common touch. Lee, whose dedication to both nonviolence and Catholicism soon
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marginalized him in a movement that had become increasingly dominated by
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militants and evangelical Christians, is perhaps even less representative than
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Widdicombe. (For a thorough account of the anti-abortion movement's turn to the
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right and the new militancy of organizations such as Operation Rescue, readers
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can refer to the recently published Wrath of Angels: The American Abortion
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War , by journalists James Risen and Judy Thomas.) Moreover, Gorney ends her
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book in 1989, with the Supreme Court ruling in Webster . This is hard to
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justify since the decision marked neither the culmination of the court's
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thinking on abortion (the Casey ruling in 1992 was at least as
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influential) nor an obvious turning point in the abortion wars. It caps her
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story simply because it caps Widdicombe's battle with Lee.
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Gorney will probably be
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praised for having drawn unusually nuanced portraits of abortion activists on
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both sides--humanizing them and in so doing narrowing the gap between them. But
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her real accomplishment is something like the opposite. The more
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compassionately and conscientiously she reconstructs Lee's views and
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Widdicombe's views, the more irresolvable their differences seem. It may be
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that only this sort of journalism, with its sympathetic attention to the
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intricacies of its characters' thoughts, could do justice to these
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differences.
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