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E-raamat: Assisted Reproduction Across Borders: Feminist Perspectives on Normalizations, Disruptions and Transmissions

Edited by (Linköping University, Sweden), Edited by (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
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Today, it often seems as though Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ARTs) have reached a stage of normalization, at least in some countries and among certain social groups. Apparently some practices for example in vitro fertilization (IVF) have become standard worldwide. The contributors to Assisted Reproduction Across Borders argue against normalization as an uncontested overall trend.

This volume reflects on the state of the art of ARTs. From feminist perspectives, the contributors focus on contemporary political debates triggered by ARTs. They examine the varying ways in which ARTs are interpreted and practised in different contexts, depending on religious, moral and political approaches. Assisted Reproduction Across Borders embeds feminist analysis of ARTs across a wide variety of countries and cultural contexts, discussing controversial practices such as surrogacy from the perspective of the global South as well as the global North as well as inequalities in terms of access to IVF.

This volume will appeal to scholars and students of anthropology, ethnography, philosophy, political science, history, sociology, film studies, media studies, literature, art history, area studies, and interdisciplinary areas such as gender studies, cultural studies, and postcolonial studies.
Notes on Contributors xi
Acknowledgments xvii
Permissions xviii
Editorial Introduction: Assisted Reproduction Across Borders: Feminist Perspectives on Normalizations, Disruptions and Transmissions 1(22)
Merete Lie
Nina Lykke
PART I ARTs in a Neoliberal World of Transnational Reproflows
23(62)
1 Citizen, Subject, Property: Indian Surrogacy and the Global Fertility Market
25(12)
Kalindi Vora
Malathi Michelle Iyengar
2 Fair Play in a Dirty Field? The Ethical Work of Commissioning Surrogacy in India
37(12)
Kristin Engh Førde
3 "Families Like We'd Always Known"? Spanish Gay Fathers' Normalization Narratives in Transnational Surrogacy
49(12)
Marcin Smietana
4 Destination Spain: Negotiating Nationality and Fertility When Traveling for Eggs
61(11)
Charlotte Kroløkke
5 The South African Economy of Egg Donation: Looking at the BioEconomic Side of Normalization
72(13)
Verena Namberger
PART II Perplexed State Regulations, Legal Inconsistencies and Cultural Tricksters
85(52)
6 Governing New Reproductive Technologies Across Western Europe: The Gender Dimension
87(13)
Isabelle Engeli
Christine Rothmayr Allison
7 Norwegian Biopolitics in the First Decade of the 2000s: Family Politics and Assisted Reproduction Understood through the Concept of the Trickster
100(12)
Kristin H. Spilker
8 Bringing It All Back Home: Cross-Border Procreative Practices. Examples from Norway
112(12)
Marit Melhuus
9 Finland as a Late Regulator of Assisted Reproduction: A Permissive Policy under Debate
124(13)
Lise Eriksson
PART III Religious Fundamentalism, Humanist Values, and State Dilemmas in an Era of Technological Monsters
137(68)
10 Refraining Conception, Reproducing Society: Italian Paradoxes
139(13)
Manuela Perrotta
11 The Veto of Moral Politics: The Catholic Church and ARTs in Ireland
152(12)
Orla Mcdonnell
12 Desiring Bodies: Problematizing the Matter of ARTs in Poland
164(12)
Edyta Just
13 Germany Goes PGD: The Appeal to Women's and Human Rights Discourse in the Paradigmatic Amendment to the German Embryo Protection Act
176(13)
Bettina Bock Von Wulfingen
14 Matters of Donation and Preserved Relations: Co-Construction of Egg Donation and Family Structures in Iran
189(16)
Tara Mehrabi
PART IV ARTs as Entangled in Demographic Agendas and Biopolitics
205(44)
15 Babies from Behind Bars: Stratified Assisted Reproduction in Palestine/Israel
207(12)
Sigrid Vertommen
16 From Precarity to Self-Governance: Performing Motherhood through IVF Treatment in Ukraine
219(13)
Polina Vlasenko
17 Russian Legislative Practices and Debates on the Restriction of Wide Access to ARTs
232(17)
Maria Kirpichenko
PART V "New Normals" and their Discontents
249(53)
18 Lesbian Kinship and ARTs in American Popular Culture: The L Word and The Kids Are All Right
251(12)
Julianne Pidduck
19 Naturalization and Un-Naturalization: ARTs, Childlessness and Choice
263(12)
Malin Noem Ravn
20 Sperm Stories: Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Sperm Donation and Sperm Banking in Denmark
275(13)
Stine Willum Adrian
21 Cellular Origins: A Visual Analysis of Time-Lapse Embryo Imaging
288(14)
Lucy Van De Wiel
Glossary 302(2)
Index 304
Merete Lie is Professor in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture and leader of the Centre for Gender Research at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway.

Nina Lykke is Professor of Gender Studies at Linköping University, Sweden, co-director of GEXcel International Collegium for Advanced Transdisciplinary Gender Studies, and director of InterGender International Research School, Sweden.