Contested narratives: a qualitative analysis of abortion testimonies in Louisiana legislature
Martha Silva, Jeni Stolow, Micki Burdick, Amy Mercieca

TL;DR
This study analyzes how abortion is discussed in Louisiana legislative testimonies, revealing polarized views shaped by religion and moral conflicts.
Contribution
The paper introduces a qualitative analysis of abortion testimonies in Louisiana, highlighting rhetorical strategies and emotional tones in post-Dobbs legislative debates.
Findings
Abortion is framed as traumatic, while childbearing is portrayed as healing from trauma.
Religious rhetoric dominates testimonies, with 'pro-life' as a central stance.
Dehumanization of survivors' experiences is evident in the discourse.
Abstract
Following the Supreme Court's 2022 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, Louisiana enacted a “trigger law” banning nearly all abortions. Attempts to reform existing restrictive legislation so as to allow for abortions under exceptions have been unsuccessful to date. This study aims to describe how abortion discourse is framed in public testimony around House Bill 346 in the 2023 Louisiana legislative session, which attempted to pass an abortion exception for pregnancy in the case of rape or incest. We conducted a conventional qualitative content analysis utilizing a rhetorical lens, using testimony transcripts from the May 10, 2023, Louisiana Administration of Criminal Justice Committee hearing. An iterative coding approach allowed us to categorize salient themes, language patterns, speaker characteristics, emotional tones, and rhetorical strategies. Demographic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRhetoric and Communication Studies · Race, History, and American Society · American Constitutional Law and Politics
