An old book lies open, its pages curled to make a heart

“Discharged Well”: or, How I Learned to Feel in the Archive

Pregnancy and Miscarriage on Social Media: New Metaphors to Make Miscarriages Easier to Talk About, and Easier to Bear

Woodcut from A Wonder of Wonders depicting the hanging of Anne Greene, which she survived. On the left side of the image are two people lying in a bed, with a speech bubble that says BEHOLD GODS PROVIDENCE. On the right is the hanging woman, by rope from a gallow. A woman is kneeling below her praying. A man pokes her with the butte of a rifle. A coffin waits open in the bottom left

News from the Dead

Intertwined Histories and Embodied Lives: An Interview with Cassia Roth

A Miscarriage of Justice

Wall art depicting a woman and a fetus in a womb

How Did We Get Here? An Interview with Lara Freidenfelds

Photo of a woman's pregnant belly, illuminated by a soft light to the right.

Openness and Authority in Pregnancy: Lucy Knisley’s Kid Gloves

Drawing of a small hospital building topped with a cross.

Church Discipline and Miscarriage Mismanagement at Catholic Hospitals

Drawing of the stages of development of a human embryo from gestation to just before birth.

Meanings and Materials of Miscarriage: How Babies in Jars Shaped Modern Pregnancy

A black-and-white embroidered image with a weeping tree in the foreground, under it is a mourning figure. It in the center of the image are two small gravestones, and int he background a large lawn leading up to a stately house or church.

Reframing the Pregnancy Story: On Literature, Stitching, and Lost Narratives