An essential source. . . . This book is a solid contribution to the field of discourse analysis.--American Historical Review''Reproductive Restraints is the first comprehensive history of the birth control movement in India to treat the subject in all its medical, political, and cultural dimensions. A rigorous and persuasive feminist analysis, it emphasizes women's experience, the operation of class and ethnicity, and the active work of gender in creating the various terrains in which birth control functioned as both a metaphor for India's 'problems' and a very material social and political question. Students of Indian women, birth control, and British India will find Ahluwalia's book indispensable; feminist and postcolonial theorists will rejoice in its usefulness for their own work.''--Antoinette Burton, author of Dwelling in the Archive: Women Writing House, Home, and History in Late Colonial India