Author

Publication

1993 - Polity Press, Cambridge, UK, England

Language

English

Word Count

58,750 words, Guess

Page Count

235 pages

Identifiers

  • Open LibraryOL1422498M
  • ISBN-100745608213
  • OCLC Control Number28798217
  • Library of Congress Control Number93032897
  • LibraryThing168368
and 1 more
  • Goodreads4455470

Classifications

  • DDC306.4/61
  • LCCRC889 .P375 1993

Description

Reproductive technology is typically discussed in the future tense. Yet doctors have always treated involuntary childlessness. This book looks at the recent history of infertility and the different ways medicine has treated it. It traces the reluctance to allow infertility a past to a new tension that has emerged between utopian and anti-utopian fears about the growth rate and composition of population. The Stork and the Syringe argues that although doctors' approach to infertility is formed in response to the exigencies of the political economy of medical practice, it also accommodates a persistent gender bias: the tendency to regard women's bodies as inviting intervention and men's as demanding caution. This bias is manifest in relation to gametes (eggs and sperm), sex hormones, in the form of medical investigations and treatment, and the frequency and enthusiasm with which the latter are carried out. Departures from this theme are rare and controversial, as the history of artificial insemination using donor semen demonstrates. This book is a major contribution to the history and sociology of reproduction, fertility, population and medicine.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Feminist perspectives

Other Editions

  • The stork and the syringe: a political history of reproductive medicinePolity Press1993-01-01

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