Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月04日
New documentary ‘Zurawski v. Texas’ shines a spotlight on life in post-Roe America
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

纪录片《Zurawski诉德州》聚焦于美国德州堕胎禁令对女性健康和生活的负面影响。影片通过讲述原告Amanda Zurawski因早产被拒绝堕胎而险些丧命,以及其他女性因堕胎禁令面临的困境,展现了堕胎禁令带来的严重后果,包括健康损害、生育能力受损、家庭关系破裂等。影片呼吁人们关注堕胎禁令对个人和家庭造成的深远影响,并引发了关于堕胎权利和女性健康等议题的讨论。该片在2024年美国总统大选前上映,旨在唤醒公众对堕胎禁令的关注,并推动相关政策的改变。

🤰影片以Amanda Zurawski的案例为中心,讲述了她因早产被拒绝堕胎而险些丧命,最终不得不进行堕胎并损害了生育能力的故事。

💔另一位原告Samantha Casiano因胎儿诊断出致命疾病,被迫将孩子生下,孩子出生后四小时即夭折,影片展现了她经历的痛苦和悲伤。

👩‍⚕️影片还关注了医生Austin Dennard的经历,她因无法在德州进行堕胎而被迫前往其他州寻求医疗服务,并因此加入了诉讼。

⚖️影片揭示了德州堕胎禁令导致女性面临的健康风险,以及对家庭和社会造成的负面影响,呼吁人们关注堕胎权利和女性健康。

👪原告Zurawski希望通过影片让观众了解堕胎禁令对家庭和个人生活带来的冲击,强调堕胎问题不仅仅是女性的议题,而是关乎人权和家庭福祉的议题。

The case asked Texas to clarify the medical emergency exemption in its abortion ban, which the plaintiffs said was unclear and put their lives at risk. The Texas Supreme Court declined to compel the state to do so in May of this year. But the story isn’t over—in addition to serving as the first plaintiff in the case, Zurawski also agreed to participate in a documentary. The resulting film, Zurawski v. Texas, was released this year and has been playing in select theaters over the past several weeks. The film doesn’t get into national politics, but it’s no accident it’s been screening in the lead-up to the U.S. presidential election on Tuesday. The documentary shows the real impact of abortion bans on people’s lives, from almost dying, to losing their fertility, to their effects on its subjects’ marriages and families. “We were really thinking about telling this from a very human perspective, rather than getting caught up in the political arguments,” says filmmaker Abbie Perrault. Amanda Zurawski, lead plaintiff in Zurawski v. Texas, is the subject of a new documentary about the human toll of abortion bans. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty ImagesZurawski’s story starts when she went into pre-term labor at 18 weeks and was denied an abortion because doctors could still detect a fetal heartbeat. She developed sepsis and eventually received an abortion, but compromised her future fertility, a story she has testified about in front of Congress and shared during a speech at the Democratic National Convention. Another plaintiff featured in the film, Samantha Casiano, carried her pregnancy to term despite a fatal fetal diagnosis and then was forced to bury her child, who died four hours after birth. The film shows the aftermath of those experiences, from Zurawski’s attempts to conceive via surrogate to Casiano’s decision to pursue a tubal ligation. The documentary also follows lead attorney Molly Duane of the Center for Reproductive Rights and Austin Dennard, an OB-GYN who joined the lawsuit as a patient because of her own experience being forced to travel out of state for an abortion.In an environment in which reporting about abortion abounds, but can sometimes struggle to break through, “we wanted to to educate audiences and take them on a journey, not just be talking heads and experts saying why abortion access is important,” says filmmaker Maisie Crow. Zurawski hopes that viewers—and voters—will learn from her story. The film shows her family members, including her father, reckon with their own politics and beliefs about abortion, coming to the conclusion that an abortion ban that put Zurawski’s life at risk (and lost others their lives) is not just. “Folks who see the film, they can see themselves in my husband, my brother, and they can see that this is not a women’s issue,” Zurawski says. “This is an issue for families. This is a human rights issue, and it affects everyone in this country.”Emma Hinchliffeemma.hinchliffe@fortune.comThe Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.ALSO IN THE HEADLINES- Poll report. In the final stretch of the U.S. presidential race, it remains a neck-and-neck contest. Kamala Harris is ahead in Nevada, North Carolina and Wisconsin, according to one set of polls, while Donald Trump leads in Arizona—with Michigan, Georgia, and Pennsylvania too close to call. New York Times- TV to AI. Kay Koplovitz was the first woman to lead a TV network in the U.S. and has invested in women-led companies through her firm Springboard. She says women are highly competitive in tech and business but still under-resourced in emerging fields like AI. New York Times- Incarceration investigation. The AP conducted a two-year investigation into prison labor, which revealed reports from incarcerated women alleging sexual abuse from correctional staff. The report found cases of women being attacked by staff members in all 50 states, often without punishment for the accused. AP- Sharing stories. Former Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards co-founded Abortion in America, a social media project sharing personal stories about abortion bans that has raised around $1 million in backing. “The only thing people respond to and remember are stories,” said Richards. New York TimesMOVERS AND SHAKERSSleep Number Corporation announced that Shelly Ibach will be retiring as chair, president, and chief executive officer; she has been at the company since 2007.D2K Traffic, a traffic management solutions provider, named Jodie Braskich chief operating officer. She was most recently director of midwestern operations at Davey Resource Group.Glenmede Investment Management, an asset management firm, appointed Elizabeth Eldridge as president. She was previously managing director at the firm.Qualtrics, an experience management company, appointed Rachita Sundar as chief financial officer. Most recently, she was SVP, financial planning and analysis at HubSpot.PCS Software, a transportation management system provider, named Danielle Villegas chief product officer. Previously, Villegas was VP of product at SkySpecs.Haymarket Media Group, a media and data company, appointed Dana DiFerdinando to its U.S. board of directors. Recently, she served as chief Data officer at GE Healthcare.ON MY RADARWhy married women leave their wedding rings at home. It’s not what you think Wall Street JournalA new era for women in rap New York TimesWomen over 70 have seen massive changes in their lifetimes. Will a woman president be another? PBSPARTING WORDS“I always ask, ‘How does my money make money?’ I've been obsessed with that. I want to be making money while I'm sleeping.”— Actor, producer, and director Eva Longoria on how she has grown as an investor after saving John Wick with a $6 million investmentThis is the web version of MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

堕胎禁令 女性健康 人权 纪录片 Zurawski诉德州
相关文章