Audiobook
Marie Stopes was a highly controversial scientist and activist in her era, campaigning for radical new views of love-based marriage, birth control, and women’s rights. As a scientist, she was a renowned palaeobotanist, specializing in issues concerning coal; these scientific pursuits led her to spend several years in Japan, where she went into some of the country's remotest coal mines to study fossils. While there, she pursued a notorious relationship with Japanese botanist Fujii Kenjiro as well as several romantic dalliances with European women in the lively Tokyo diplomatic community. She established the first birth-control clinic in England in 1921, committed to an abortion-free philosophy of family planning. Stopes continues to be an ambiguous figure in historical consideration, her family-planning philosophies verging throughout her life on less-savory views such as eugenics and race purification, though the terminology employed at the time makes it unclear whether or not she was merely advocating more careful, consciously-planned, and responsible parenthood. That she rejected fascist views of eugenics is plain by her anti-Nazi passions in later life. These journal entries from Japan cover the period of August 6, 1907 through January 24, 1909, and show both her incisively scientific observational powers and a profound appreciation of the poignant beauty of Japanese culture and sensibilities, which she saw to be under threat during that era of modernization and industrialization. (Summary by Expatriate)
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| 1 | 11:37 | |
| 2 | 19:37 | |
| 3 | 20:33 | |
| 4 | 21:02 | |
| 5 | 22:15 | |
| 6 | 19:11 | |
| 7 | 20:32 | |
| 8 | 19:22 | |
| 9 | 22:08 | |
| 10 | 19:48 | |
| 11 | 19:47 | |
| 12 | 22:40 | |
| 13 | 19:55 | |
| 14 | 20:06 | |
| 15 | 22:29 | |
| 16 | 20:34 | |
| 17 | 19:59 | |
| 18 | 19:16 | |
| 19 | 21:18 | |
| 20 | 21:21 | |
| 21 | 20:14 | |
| 22 | 19:53 | |
| 23 | 17:41 | |
| 24 | 16:54 |
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