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My Body, My Book Club

Bodily Autonomy: Uniting Through Books

Endometriosis cover

Endometriosis — Jen Moore

Thu, 5 Mar 2026 · 6:30 pm

In collaboration with The Vavengers

The Vavengers

Upcoming Events

Endometriosis

by Jen Moore

Comprehensive, accessible and incredibly useful' – Naga Munchetty, BBC Radio 5 Live

Of all the conditions that expose the cracks in modern women's healthcare, endometriosis is perhaps the best example. While it affects 1 in 10 women—roughly the same prevalence as diabetes—it remains chronically underfunded and poorly understood. This month, we read Jen Moore's Endometriosis to examine why women's pain is so routinely dismissed.

Moore challenges the view that endometriosis is limited to painful periods. She reveals a whole-body disease that the medical establishment has historically failed to take seriously. Patients face an average diagnosis delay of nearly a decade, and medical students often receive no mandatory training on the condition at all. Moore's own journey involved twenty-two years of navigating a system that normalised her pain before she received a correct diagnosis.

Our discussion will use Moore's work to address broader systemic failures in women's health. We will explore why research into conditions like endometriosis lags so far behind other fields and discuss how medical authority figures decide whose suffering is real. The conversation will also cover the heavy burden placed on patients to become their own case managers in a broken system. You do not need to have endometriosis to join. This is a conversation for anyone interested in the politics of bodies, the history of medicine, and the ongoing fight for a healthcare system that listens to us.

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We Are Animals

by Jennifer Case

When Jennifer Case became pregnant unexpectedly with her second child, she was overwhelmed at the prospect of caring for another child in a society with high expectations and low support for mothers. She sought to reclaim control over, if not her changing body, then at least her rapidly declining mental health. Immersing herself in research, Case learned that the United States has one of the highest maternal death rates among developed countries. One in every five women develops a mental health issue as a result of pregnancy. It became clear to her that in order to address the sexism and isolation mothers face—including the racism that further marginalizes women of color—we must recognize these as social problems that affect us all.

We Are Animals draws attention to these issues by examining key moments in Case's life where her experience as both a woman in twenty-first-century America and a child-bearing mammal, and the conflicts between these two identities, were brought into sharp relief. From the surprising salve of parasocial interactions on baby forums to the not so surprisingly intertwined history of industrial dairy farming and wearable breast pumps, Case explores an array of realities that give historical and cultural context to the experience of motherhood.

The essays collected here offer a balm for women who have struggled in silence over childbirth trauma, conflicted responses to motherhood, or a deeply felt intuition that what their bodies needed as mothers did not match what society provided. They also offer a much needed, nuanced perspective for policymakers, activists, and medical professionals who continue to shape women's experience of motherhood.

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Jen Moore

Jen Moore is a highly respected educator, speaker and campaigner specialising in endometriosis and adenomyosis. The co-founder of The Endometriosis Action Alliance, she also consults for organisations such as the NHS, sits on the All Party Parliamentary Group for endometriosis, and is committed to overhauling clinical education at medical schools. Through her work she has amplified the voices of thousands of endometriosis sufferers and promoted change at an institutional level.

Jennifer Case

Jennifer Case is an essayist and creative writing professor at the University of Central Arkansas. Her writing explores issues related to place, environment, family, and motherhood, and has appeared in journals such as Orion, North American Review, and Prairie Schooner. She is the recipient of a Bread Loaf Bakeless Scholarship and the author of three books: the essay collection We Are Animals: On the Nature and Politics of Motherhood; a memoir, Sawbill: A Search for Place; and the hybrid work, The Carework Project: Reckoning with Love, Labor, and the Living World.

The Endometriosis Foundation

In March we are featuring The Endometriosis Foundation, A patient-led charity dedicated to raising awareness and providing vital support to those living with endometriosis.

Learn More About The Endometriosis Foundation →

Charity partner coming soon

We're finalising our charity partner for this event. Check back soon for details!

Ready to Join Us?

"Endometriosis"

by Jen Moore

Thursday, 5 March 2026

6:30pm to 7:30pm (UK Time)

Online Event — join from anywhere

Book Your Place →

Suggested minimum donation: £3

All proceeds go directly to our featured charity of the month.

If the donation amount is a concern for you, please get in touch — we never want cost to keep anyone away. Everyone is welcome.

Ready to Join Us?

"We Are Animals"

by Jennifer Case

Thursday, 16 April 2026

6:30pm to 7:30pm (UK Time)

Online Event — join from anywhere

Book Your Place →

Suggested minimum donation: £3

All proceeds go directly to our featured charity of the month.

If the donation amount is a concern for you, please get in touch — we never want cost to keep anyone away. Everyone is welcome.

Previous Books

About the Book Club

My Body, My Book Club aims to connect people and create communities. We read fiction books (with the odd memoir here and there too) that deal with different aspects of how we understand bodily autonomy and exemplify how we can get involved and support each other.

Issues such as gender-based violence, racism, homelessness, displacement, abortion, obstetric violence, and the rights of marginalised communities, like the challenges faced by LGBTQ+ groups, are just some of the topics we cover.

All opinions expressed during book club meetings are those of individuals and do not necessarily reflect those of My Body, My Book Club or the charities it supports.

How it Works

We know this is heavy stuff, but the book club hopes to foster empathy as well as raise awareness and question established narratives. Our main goal is to connect communities. So, for each session, we partner with a charity working with the subject we will be reading about in the novel, and we invite an expert on the topic to join our chat. (Also, all proceeds from the sale of tickets will be donated to the month's charity.)

Too Busy to Read the Book?

We understand that people are busy and life happens – so please do join us even if you don't manage to finish the book in time. We will also always provide other ways in which you can get involved and learn more about the subject in the "Next Book" section, whether it's through a video or a blog post.

Our Guidelines

We want the book club to be a safe and welcoming environment for everyone. So, please be mindful of our guidelines:

  1. You (and every part of you!) are welcome and belong here
  2. Be as talkative or as quiet as you wish, no judgement
  3. Do come along even if you haven't finished the book
  4. Be respectful to everyone
  5. Try to be on time, as our sessions are fairly short
  6. Don't assume pronouns and please introduce yourself with your pronouns
  7. If sharing aspects of our discussion, please ask people for their permission
  8. Look after yourself: take breaks whenever you need them
  9. Keep in touch and feel free to share resources with everyone
  10. Take action: whether is googling a charity or telling someone about the book club

About the Host

Julia Martins profile picture

Dr Julia Martins is a historian of the body, an activist, and an unapologetic bookworm. She is an Activism Outreach Supporter with The Vavengers, a member of the Charity Committee of the FGM Education Project, and an editor at the Feminist Perspectives Collective.

She writes about gender history and history of medicine, and how history can inform contemporary feminism.

You can check out her YouTube channel Living History and her website, and follow her on TikTok, Twitter, and Instagram.

My Body, My Book Club was launched as part of her involvement in the Abortion Rights UK Activist Bootcamp.

Stay in Touch

Contact

Any questions or suggestions, feel free to email us at:

contact@mybodymybookclub.com

or find us on Instagram:

@mybodymybookclub