In this article, corporeal feminism is utilised as a tool to uncover the maternal bodies produced when reproductive technology meets pregnant flesh. Moving from the premise that bodies are not inert or stable entities but rather are constantly being produced and reproduced through their interaction with their environment, I highlight three of the many bodies that arise in techno-maternity. The body ââ¬Ëat riskââ¬â¢, the ââ¬Ëin/visibleââ¬â¢ body and the ââ¬Ëcommodified bodyââ¬â¢ are all discussed in order to reread both the possibilities and the problematics of reproduction in a technological age, and to complicate the staid feminist narrative of reproductive technology as either ââ¬Ëliberatingââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ëoppressiveââ¬â¢
This article takes the ongoing debate about whether and how procreative technologies should be regul...
The development of ectogenesis or artificial womb technology is currently ongoing and likely to be i...
[EN] This article aims at showing how women's bodies and those of their children participated in the...
Across scientific, medical, legal, political, popular, and religious discourses, the “mother” and th...
Scientists are developing a technique called in vitro gametogenesis or IVG to generate synthetic gam...
In this critical perspective, I call for interdisciplinary feminist research to reclaim the subject ...
This article examines the mechanisms producing the meaning of infertility and the new ways of produc...
This Article explores the legal implications of a scientific fantasy: building artificial wombs that...
Chapter from Sex/Machine: Readings in Culture, Gender, and Technology, edited by Patrick D. Hopkins....
This article focuses on the transformation of the female reproductive body with the use of assisted ...
The body is of central concern to midwifery yet, as a profession, we have largely failed to grapple ...
This article is concerned with the emergence of two new types of patients in the medical reproductiv...
This paper critiques gendered and phallocentric representations of the maternal ...
Extracorporeal pregnancy (ectogenesis) presents perhaps the culmination of reproductive technology (...
This article discusses the limits of the feminist theory of commodification of women’s body in contr...
This article takes the ongoing debate about whether and how procreative technologies should be regul...
The development of ectogenesis or artificial womb technology is currently ongoing and likely to be i...
[EN] This article aims at showing how women's bodies and those of their children participated in the...
Across scientific, medical, legal, political, popular, and religious discourses, the “mother” and th...
Scientists are developing a technique called in vitro gametogenesis or IVG to generate synthetic gam...
In this critical perspective, I call for interdisciplinary feminist research to reclaim the subject ...
This article examines the mechanisms producing the meaning of infertility and the new ways of produc...
This Article explores the legal implications of a scientific fantasy: building artificial wombs that...
Chapter from Sex/Machine: Readings in Culture, Gender, and Technology, edited by Patrick D. Hopkins....
This article focuses on the transformation of the female reproductive body with the use of assisted ...
The body is of central concern to midwifery yet, as a profession, we have largely failed to grapple ...
This article is concerned with the emergence of two new types of patients in the medical reproductiv...
This paper critiques gendered and phallocentric representations of the maternal ...
Extracorporeal pregnancy (ectogenesis) presents perhaps the culmination of reproductive technology (...
This article discusses the limits of the feminist theory of commodification of women’s body in contr...
This article takes the ongoing debate about whether and how procreative technologies should be regul...
The development of ectogenesis or artificial womb technology is currently ongoing and likely to be i...
[EN] This article aims at showing how women's bodies and those of their children participated in the...