Litcius/Paper detail

The “abortion imaginary”: Shared perceptions and personal representations among everyday Americans

Tricia C. Bruce, Kendra Hutchens, Sarah K. Cowan

2024Science Advances12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Drawing upon 217 in-depth interviews and the concept of the "social imaginary," we introduce the "abortion imaginary"-a set of shared understandings regarding abortion and abortion patients. We identify four interrelated facets of the U.S. abortion imaginary pertaining to who gets an abortion and why: maternal inevitability, economic decision-making, relationship precarity, and emotional fragility. We then show how shared perceptions of abortion patients diverge into polarized opinions, revealing how those who know someone who has had an abortion differ from those who do not. Centering personal "exemplars," we integrate conceptual work on social imaginaries with contact theory to illuminate how divergent opinions coexist with shared cultural understandings.

Topics & Concepts

The ImaginaryAbortionPerceptionSocial psychologySet (abstract data type)PrecarityPsychologySociologyGender studiesPsychoanalysisComputer sciencePregnancyProgramming languageNeuroscienceGeneticsBiologyReproductive Health and ContraceptionHistorical Studies on Reproduction, Gender, Health, and Societal ChangesMormonism, Religion, and History