“By bringing self-help to the center of a historical analysis of the women’s health movement, Revolutionizing Women’s Healthcare crucially expands our understandings of theoretical and political debates within the feminist movement around issues such as racism and “intersectional” marginalization, a narrow focus on reproductive health versus “holistic” approaches, and debates around the values of “infiltration” of mainstream medical care versus “radical” independent feminist healthcare delivery.”
~Jennifer Nelson, author of More Than Medicine: A History of the Feminist Women's Health Movement
“Revolutionizing Women’s Healthcare provides an important exploration of how women’s health feminists in the late twentieth-century seized upon the larger cultural turn toward self-help and adapted it for liberatory ends. Dudley-Shotwell shows how women’s health activists adopted and transformed ideas of self-help to better understand their bodies, protest medicine as usual, and address the holistic health needs of women of color and indigenous women.”
~Judith A. Houck, author of Hot and Bothered: Women, Medicine, and Menopause in the United States
"This approach brings a new and unique perspective to a well-studied topic and provides a companion resource to complement previously published texts. Recommended."
~Choice
~With Good Reason podcast
"[An] important study...[a] welcome in the classroom and among historians of medicine, feminism, and social movements as well as other interested general readers."
~American Historical Review
"Revolutionizing Women's Healthcare does its best work examining the divisions within the self-help movement [and] offers...a way of understanding some of the divisions, conflicts, and persistence activists encountered in their efforts to empower women. The book also reveals an ongoing dilemma that many of the women only slowly came to realize—that their efforts at self-help were necessary because society, and women themselves, put their needs last."
~Journal of American History