Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Technologies of Reproduction Across the Lifecourse: Expanding Reproductive Studies [Kõva köide]

Edited by (University of Cambridge, UK), Edited by (University of Essex, UK)
  • Kõva köide
  • Hind: 130,98 €*
  • * saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule, mille hind võib erineda kodulehel olevast hinnast
  • See raamat on trükist otsas, kuid me saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule.
  • Kogus:
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Tasuta tarne
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
>Human reproduction is mediated through many technologies, both high- and low-tech. These technologies of reproduction are not experienced in isolation by most of the people who use them. However clinical, public health and social scientific research often reflects a parcelling out of reproduction into specialist areas of biomedical intervention. Studies tend to be bound to specific physiological events, technologies (particularly those that are more obviously technical or modern) and people namely cis, heterosexual, white, middle-class women. Yet, with the ever-expanding horizon of reproductive technologies and the rapid development of the fertility industry, the reality is that many individuals will engage with more than one such technology at some point in their life.



>Technologies of Reproduction Across the Lifecourse presents dialogue between scholars on different reproductive technologies not only from a comparative empirical perspective, arguing that operating in disciplinary silos and working from narrow ideas about RTs and their meanings can put reproductive studies in danger of missing, and thereby reproducing, the kinds of power structures that shape reproductive life.
List of Tables and Figures
xi
About the Contributors xiii
Foreword xvii
Rene Almeling
Acknowledgements xxi
Chapter 1 Introduction: Technologies of Reproduction Across the Lifecourse
1(28)
Katharine Dow
Victoria Boydell
Reflection One: Knowledge
21(8)
Victoria Boydell
Katharine Dow
Section One Reproductive Technologies Across the Lifecourse
Chapter 2 `I Feel Like Some Kind of Namoona': Examining Sterilisation in Women's Abortion Trajectories in India
29(20)
Rishita Nandagiri
Chapter 3 When Time Becomes Biological: Experiences of Age-Related Infertility and Anticipation in Reproductive Medicine
49(18)
Nolwenn Buhler
Chapter 4 Delaying Menopause, Buying Time? Positioning Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation and Transplantation Technologies for Delaying Menopause in the Context of Women's Embodied Reproductive Choice and Agency Across the Lifecourse
67(16)
Susan Pickard
Chapter 5 Chronic Uncertainty and Modest Expectations: Navigating Fertility Desires in the Context of Life With Endometriosis
83(26)
Nicky Hudson
Caroline Law
Reflection Two: Choice
101(8)
Victoria Boydell
Katharine Dow
Section Two Lifecourses of Reproductive Technologies
Chapter 6 Contraceptive Futures? The Hormonal Body, Populationism and Reproductive Justice in the Face of Climate Change
109(22)
Nayantara Sheoran Appleton
Chapter 7 Spectacular Reproduction Revealed: Genetic Genealogy Testing as a Re(tro)productive Technology
131(18)
Sallie Han
Chapter 8 Getting the Timing Right: Fertility Apps and the Temporalities of Trying to Conceive
149(14)
Josie Hamper
Chapter 9 Bio-Genetics and/at the Border: The Structural Intimacies of LGBTQ Transnational Kinship
163(22)
Sonja Mackenzie
Chapter 10 A Balancing Act: Situating Reproductive Technologies Across Time in the UK
185(24)
Victoria Boydell
Reflection Three: Relationality
203(6)
Victoria Boydell
Katharine Dow
Section Three Reading Across Reproductive Technologies
Chapter 11 `Well, She's Entitled to Her Choice': Negotiating Technologies Amidst Anticipatory Futures of Reproductive Potential
209(16)
Ben Kasstan
Chapter 12 Men as Irrational Variables in Family Planning? Understanding the Landscape, Technological Advancements, and Extending Health Psychology Theories and Models
225(22)
Amanda Wilson
Chapter 13 Inclusion, Exclusion, Anticipation: How the Politics of Intimate Relationships Structure Innovation
247(14)
Ryan Whitacre
Chapter 14 Integrating Reproductive and Nonreproductive Technologies: Egg Freezing and Medical Abortion
261(24)
Lucy van de Wiel
Afterword 285
Victoria Boydell
Katharine Dow
Victoria Boydell is a lecturer the University of Essex and Research Fellow at the Geneva Graduate Institute. Her research looks at the social and cultural dynamics around reproductive technologies and health care, including how to operationalize human rights and accountability.



Katharine Dow is a Senior Research Associate in the Department of Sociology and Deputy Director of the Reproductive Sociology Research Group (ReproSoc) at the University of Cambridge. Her research centres on public, ethical and political discourses around reproduction and she specialises in ethnographic research on connections between reproductive and environmental concerns and activism.