MJCCA Book Fest In Your Living Room Live Presents Gabrielle Glaser - American Baby Virtual Event

MJCCA Book Fest In Your Living Room Live Presents Gabrielle Glaser - American Baby Virtual Event

Sunday, Jan 31, 2021 8:00 PM

Location:
Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta on Zoom

The shocking truth about postwar adoption in America, told through the bittersweet story of one teenager, the son she was forced to relinquish, and their search to find each other.

The Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta welcomes author and journalist Gabrielle Glaser for an online discussion of her new book, "American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption," on Sunday, January 31, 2021, at 8 PM (EST). Glaser will appear in conversation with CNN journalist Holly Firfer.

This program is presented in partnership with the National JCC Literary Consortium.

Tickets options are as follows:

-Admit one for $11 (does not include a copy of the book); or 

-Admit one for $35 (includes a copy of “American Baby." Price covers shipping.) 

All books will be shipped after the event. Please note that USPS is experiencing delays due to the pandemic. Mailed packages may arrive several days later than usual.

About the Book

In 1961, sixteen-year-old Margaret Erle fell in love and became pregnant. Despite Margaret’s intentions to marry her child’s father and her desperation to keep her baby boy, Margaret was coerced into signing away her parental rights. After only two brief visits, Margaret’s son vanished into an adoption agency’s hold and out of Margaret’s reach for decades to come. In "American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption," New York Times bestselling author and journalist Gabrielle Glaser explores the untold story of a predatory, secret adoption system in postwar America through the dual stories of Margaret and the son she never intended to give up.

In revelatory detail, "American Baby" examines how the exploitative adoptive system placed children with hopeful families, fabricated stories about infants’ origins and destinations, then closed the door firmly between the parties forever. Glaser brilliantly maps the rise of the adoption business, an industry that expanded at the height of the Baby Boom on the backs of “girls in trouble” and the infertile couples determined to fit the mold of the nuclear family. She reveals how the adoption system struck unethical deals with doctors and researchers for pseudoscientific "assessments," and shamed millions of young women into surrendering their children. 

Glaser demonstrates the obstacles millions of young women faced — through their forced stays in maternity homes, to their coerced surrender of wanted children, and the closed records that made it virtually impossible to reconnect with them even decades later. Using years of research and collected interviews with more than one hundred birth mothers and adoptees, Glaser discusses:

-The pseudoscientific, government-funded experiments behind guaranteeing parents ‘blue-ribbon babies’ including largely unknown “Induced Crying” studies in which scientists shot rubber bands at the feet of newborn babies in the custody of adoption agencies to measure their cries. The ones who cried the loudest were deemed the most intelligent.

-The widespread practice of using children surrendered for adoption as “human dolls” for home economics students learning to become mothers.

-What women had to endure in the maternity homes, where they were denied agency to their own bodies.

-How open adoption is the rule today, but the identities of many who were adopted or who surrendered a child in the postwar decades are locked in sealed files to this day.

"American Baby" is a tale of love, loss, and the search for identity, and ultimately shows a path to justice and healing after years of shame and secrecy. 

About the Author

Gabrielle Glaser is a New York Times bestselling author and journalist whose work on mental health, medicine, and culture has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times, The Daily Beast, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Self, and many other publications. She has appeared on many national radio and television programs, including "NPR's Fresh Air," All Things Considered, NBC's "Nightly News," and ABC's "World News Tonight."