<p> The 1960s was a decade of massive political and cultural change in Western Europe as seismic shifts took place in in attitudes towards sexuality gender and motherhood in everyday life. Through case studies of British and French films <em>Pepsi and the Pill</em> offers a fresh vision of a pivotal moment in European culture exploring the many ways in which political activity and celebrated film movements mutually shaped each other in their views on gender sexuality and domesticity. As the specter of popular nationalism once again looms across Europe this book offers a timely account of the legacy of crucial debates over issues including reproductive rights migration and reproductive nationalism at the intersection of political discourse protest and film.</p>