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E-raamat: Donor Conception for Life: Psychoanalytic Reflections on New Ways of Conceiving the Family

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This book is about the psychological experiences of women and men who have used donor conception to create their families. The 2005 amendment to legislation in the UK gives donor-conceived young people the right to identify information concerning their origins when they reach the age of eighteen. Genetic links between the donors’ families and recipient families are creating new patterns of relationships with significant psychological implications.

The authors in this book offer accounts of their diverse clinical research and personal experiences. They describe the challenge of powerful conscious and unconscious fantasies that can be aroused and how these may re-awaken early anxieties and developmental struggles. The way these emotional challenges are negotiated is likely to be reflected in how parents talk with children about their donor origins.

This thought-provoking book addresses people who are involved both personally and professionally in the field of donor conception. It will be of help to those who have direct experience of donor-assisted conception or are contemplating using it to create a family. Friends or relatives wishing to understand more about the process may also find this book informative. For many, the journey to becoming a donor-assisted parent can still feel a lonely one and the descriptions of the personal experiences of others referred to in the book are supportive and illuminating. For clinicians and researchers of all kinds who work with infertility, assisted reproductive technologies and donor conception, this book offers a deeper understanding of those whose lives have been affected by donor conception.

Arvustused

'Infertility strikes indiscriminately, severely undermining one's sense of continuity and "generative identity". Fundamental axioms are undermined by reproductive innovations, such as asexual fertilisation. A couple's trust in their own baby-making capacities is shattered when their exclusive intimacy is invaded by fertility experts' intrusive investigations and treatments. Further complex emotions arise if the womb must offer hospitality to a stranger's embryo or gametes - an act that will divert the family's genetic line forever. This book breaks the silence surrounding donor conception, revealing some of the unconscious desires, psychological strategies and dilemmas experienced by members of the "DC kinship triad" (donors/recipients/offspring) when reproductive technologies provide new hope, yet challenge our previously held cherished beliefs about family formation.'- Professor Joan Raphael-Leff, UCL/Anna Freud Centre, London, and author of The Dark Side of the Womb

Acknowledgements vii
About The Editor And Contributors viii
Statement Of Confidentiality xi
Foreword xii
James Rose
PART I AN OVERVIEW OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ISSUES RELATED TO REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY
Chapter One Introduction: how do we conceive the family?
3(16)
Katherine Fine
Chapter Two Psychoanalysis and infertility: myths and realities
19(30)
Roberta J. Apfel
Rheta G. Keylor
Chapter Three Scrambled eggs: psychological meanings of new reproductive choices for lesbians
49(20)
Susan C. Vaughan
PART II DONOR CONCEPTION: AN EXPLORATION OF SOME OF THE ISSUES FACING INDIVIDUALS AND COUPLES
Chapter Four Donor conception: family of choice?
69(26)
Katherine Fine
Tamsin Mitchell
Chapter Five "It takes a second to be a father but a lifetime to be a daddy" Men's experiences of infertility and donor conception Amy Schofield
95(34)
Chapter Six When baby makes three or four or more attachment individuation identity in assisted conception families Diane Ehrensaft
129(24)
PART III AN EXPLORATION OF THE IMPACT UPON CHILDREN OF KNOWING HOW THEY WERE CONCEIVED
Chapter Seven Telling and talking: a family affair
153(28)
Olivia Montuschi
Chapter Eight Understanding and managing relationships in donor
181(30)
Ken Daniels
PART IV POSSIBLE IMPLICATIONS AND SPECULATIONS ABOUT THE FUTURE
Chapter Nine Donor conception and the loss of old certainties
211(14)
James Rose
Appendix Organisations and useful websites 225(4)
Index 229
Katherine Fine is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist with the British Psychotherapy Foundation, working in private practice in London. A member of the Donor Conception Network since its inception in 1993, she has facilitated both 'Preparation for (donor conception) Parenthood' and 'Talking and Telling' workshops. She is a visiting lecturer and supervisor at the Tavistock Centre in London and WPF Therapy (Westminster Pastoral Foundation) in London.