<p>'This edited volume from Griffin and Leibetseder (both, Uppsala Univ., Sweden) addresses bioprecarity, both theoretically and practically, in relation to bodies and notions of embodiment. While feminist scholarship has considered bodies for some time, this volume fills a gap in the literature by thematizing precisely how bodies involved in intimate labor are “made vulnerable.” That is, the volume’s contributors address how societal norms and regulations work to “require individuals to seek or provide bodily interventions of different kinds.” The collection contains 12 chapters organized into 5 parts. Topics considered include kin-making, commercial surrogacy, intimate partner violence, reproductive reconstruction, and histories of medical research as related to indigenous and transgender bodies. Griffin and Leibetseder have given careful attention to the layout of the volume, providing their own opening chapters as an entryway to the text. The book is clearly written and well supported with references. The scholarship is rigorous and links to canonical figures such as Judith Butler and Michel Foucault, as well as many other well-known scholars.'<br /><i>M. K. Bloodsworth-Lugo, Washington State University</i></p>

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How have rapid changes in biotechnologisation, for example around assisted reproductive technologies or (re)constructive surgery, effected those seeking help with fertility treatment or clitoral reconstruction? What is involved for queer people in making a family of their own, or for trans people to access the relevant surgery? This volume argues that contemporary cultures foster bioprecarity by categorizing groups of people in certain ways and/or by denying them access to the treatment they seek or need. Drawing on original empirical data with trans and queer people, but also other minoritised and racialized groups, this volume explores how bodily interventions, their regulation, and the intimate labour the interventions involve, create vulnerabilities.
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This volume is about the relationship between bodily interventions, intimate labour and bioprecarity. It considers how access to and regulations around different kinds of medical intervention create vulnerabilities, especially for minorities, racialized groups, queers and trans people.
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Introduction – Gabriele Griffin and Doris LeibetsederPart I: Theorizing bioprecarity and the body1 Intimate labour and bioprecarity - Gabriele Griffin2 Bioprecarity as categorical framing - Doris LeibetsederPart II: Precarity in the making of kin 3 Precarious labourers of love: Queer kinship, reproductive labour and biopolitics - Ulrika Dahl4 Precarious bodily performances in queer and transgender reproduction with ART - Doris Leibetseder5 Bioprecarity and pregnancy in lesbian kinship - Petra NordqvistPart III: Bioprecarity and bodies as pieces6 Precarious pregnancies and precious products: Transnational commercial surrogacy in Thailand - Elina Nilsson7 ‘It’s just sperm. That’s all you’re giving.’: Men’s views of sperm donation - Gabriele Griffin8 Bodily disrepair: Bioprecarity in the context of humanitarian surgical missions - Nancy WorthingtonPart IV: Bioprecarity in the transgression of boundaries of intimacy9 Transgressing boundaries: Seeking help against intimate partner violence in lesbian and queer relationships - Nicole Ovesen10 Precarious subjectivities: Understanding the intimate labour involved in seeking clitoral reconstruction after female genital cutting - Malin JordalPart V: Bioprecarity and eugenicist histories11 ‘My body, my self’: Indigeneity, bioprecarity and the construction of the embodied self – an artist’s view - Katarina Pirak Sikku and Gabriele Griffin12 The intimate labour of non-normative bodies: Transgender patients in early Swedish medical research - Julian HonkasaloConclusions - Gabriele Griffin and Doris LeibetsederIndex
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Rapid recent developments in biotechnologies have produced both opportunities for and constraints on bodily interventions. This volume considers the interrelation between bodily interventions, intimate labour and bioprecarity, examining how different kinds of biotechnologized processes and regulations affect those who seek interventions and help. This includes kin-making with assisted reproductive technologies (ART) – particularly among queer and trans people – body modifications for those affected by female genital cutting (FGC), gender-affirming surgeries, medical humanitarian missions to poverty- and crisis-stricken countries, and the reappropriation of bodies that have been racialized through eugenicist practices. The authors argue that the vulnerabilities that these interventions create for those involved derive partly from the interventions themselves, but also from the ways in which legal, medical and other categorisations enable or disable access to different kinds of medical treatment. Bodily interventions and intimate labour links these concerns to other histories of bioprecarization, including, for example, help-seeking in the context of intimate partner violence, pursuing trans surgery and eugenicist treatments of indigenous people. In all these cases, certain social groups are marginalized based on how they are categorized in different kinds of discourses. Individuals are either denied or approved for treatment, made to perform particular identities to access this help, or have to travel abroad to receive treatment because of the category-dependent restrictions in their own country. With contributions from distinguished academics such as Petra Nordqvist and Ulrika Dahl, this volume appeals to readers in gender studies, sociology, cultural anthropology and social policy.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781526138569
Publisert
2020-02-11
Utgiver
Vendor
Manchester University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
17 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
U, P, 05, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Om bidragsyterne

Gabriele Griffin is Professor of Gender Research at Uppsala University

Doris Leibetseder is a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow (2017-2019) at Uppsala University