When parents and researchers talk of queer perspectives on pregnancy, birth and parenting, an issue that we often avoid is queer experiences of loss during pregnancy, birth or adoption. This chapter centers on the personal narratives collected by two researchers—an American anthropologist and a British psychologist —who met online after their own experiences with pregnancy loss as queer women. We present the stories of queer people—primarily lesbian and bisexual women, but also several gay men and transpeople—as they have experienced reproductive loss. These stories are drawn from Peel’s online survey of 60 non-heterosexual women from the UK, USA, Canada and Australia and Craven’s 40 interviews with LGBTQ people who had experienced loss i...
The acts of conceiving and giving birth beyond socially sanctioned binary gender roles arguably repr...
Introduction: In recent years the psychology of sexualities has diversified. There has been increase...
In this talk, I offer an argument for interrogating manifestations of heterosexism in lesbian, gay, ...
When parents and researchers talk of queer perspectives on pregnancy, birth and parenting, an issue ...
LGBTQ communities have a long history of memorializing loss—The NAMES Project or AIDS memorial quilt...
This item is only available electronically.While reproductive technologies are facilitating the expa...
Background: Although pregnancy loss is a distressing health event for many women, research typically...
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ) people in North America have historically been cate...
background: Although pregnancy loss is a distressing health event for many women, research typically...
Due to the increase in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other (+) (LGBTQ+) people see...
The global advent of assisted human reproduction has brought with it an upheaval in social, cultural...
This research developed as a qualitative analysis of the experiences of queer individuals who have g...
Reproductive loss, which includes miscarriage and nongestational loss, such as adoption loss, is rar...
Parenting in queer families calls into question some of our most fundamental assumptions: that paren...
Aims and objectives. Participant narratives from a feminist and queer phe- nomenological study aim t...
The acts of conceiving and giving birth beyond socially sanctioned binary gender roles arguably repr...
Introduction: In recent years the psychology of sexualities has diversified. There has been increase...
In this talk, I offer an argument for interrogating manifestations of heterosexism in lesbian, gay, ...
When parents and researchers talk of queer perspectives on pregnancy, birth and parenting, an issue ...
LGBTQ communities have a long history of memorializing loss—The NAMES Project or AIDS memorial quilt...
This item is only available electronically.While reproductive technologies are facilitating the expa...
Background: Although pregnancy loss is a distressing health event for many women, research typically...
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ) people in North America have historically been cate...
background: Although pregnancy loss is a distressing health event for many women, research typically...
Due to the increase in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other (+) (LGBTQ+) people see...
The global advent of assisted human reproduction has brought with it an upheaval in social, cultural...
This research developed as a qualitative analysis of the experiences of queer individuals who have g...
Reproductive loss, which includes miscarriage and nongestational loss, such as adoption loss, is rar...
Parenting in queer families calls into question some of our most fundamental assumptions: that paren...
Aims and objectives. Participant narratives from a feminist and queer phe- nomenological study aim t...
The acts of conceiving and giving birth beyond socially sanctioned binary gender roles arguably repr...
Introduction: In recent years the psychology of sexualities has diversified. There has been increase...
In this talk, I offer an argument for interrogating manifestations of heterosexism in lesbian, gay, ...