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NEWS & LETTERS, MAY 2003

Novel imagines future ruled by religious Right

HALF NATION UNDER GOD, Cora Corbett. 2002: Tucson, AZ, Eru Books. 342 pp.

HALF NATION UNDER GOD is a novel by Cora Corbett published in 2002 by Eru Books, a new feminist publishing company. It is set in the near future in the U.S. to show why the religious Right is dangerous to democracy. Half of the states are "free" and operate under democracy as we know it today, while half are under the type of government that the religious Right wants to impose.  

Sharon Clark, a reporter from the free state of Southern California, goes to the "religious" state of Arizona to investigate abuses of women imprisoned for attempting to have abortions or attempting to leave the state while pregnant. Her intent is to expose the corruption of the "Moralist" party to prevent Southern California from voting "Moralist" in the next election.

She learns that women of color imprisoned for having an abortion are sterilized, while white women are impregnated several times before their release, their babies sold to infertile couples. Pregnant white teenagers are urged by religious right "clinics" and radio commercials to give their babies up for adoption to religious right couples. The novel makes the point that those who want to prohibit safe, legal abortion are not concerned with the morality of killing fetuses, as mixed-race pregnancies are aborted.

Cora Corbett also shows that reproductive rights are connected to human rights. Two Hispanic teenagers having an argument over whether their oppression is "really" about sexism or racism realize that it is about both. Two other Hispanic teenagers, Martha and Anthony, are placed in foster care when their mother is imprisoned for practicing herbal medicine for people who can't afford medical care. They experience brutal treatment designed to make them into submissive servants, then told that they must work for years to pay the state back for their time in foster care.

The religious Right often accuses abortion rights activists of making human beings into "commodities" by not giving fetuses the status of human beings. That it is the religious Right and capitalism that make human beings into commodities is illustrated in the novel by indentured servitude for people of color and the expectation that white women enter into submissive roles in marriage. It is illustrated by the selling of babies and the making of white women into "breeders."

 At the beginning, Sharon wants her Pulitzer-winning story, Martha wants to free her brother, and both want to flee to safety. But both realize that there will be no safety in the free states if people who are aware of the situation do not take a stand. Both reject a political network in Arizona that plots a violent overthrow of the government because it does not try to save individuals, considering them casualties of war.

The other option is unclear, as the book leaves the characters at a point where they are committed to social change without saying exactly how they will create this change. However Sharon reacts to the violent revolutionaries by expressing a preference for democratic action by educated masses.

–Adele

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