Reproduction and Society (2 ed)
Interdisciplinary Readings

Edited by Carole Joffe,Jennifer Reich

ISBN13: 9781032225272

Imprint: Routledge

Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Format: Paperback / softback

Published: 28/04/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
The new edition of Reproduction and Society assembles an authoritative collection of the best scholarship on reproductive matters to help students and readers think critically and more expansively about acts of reproduction as social phenomena. The social, political, and personal meaning of reproduction have become increasingly important and surround us in the news, during elections, and even within popular culture. In the aftermath of the United States Supreme Court’s decision to overturn a nearly 50-year-old precedent guaranteeing a constitutional right to abortion, these issues have become even more pressing. Exploring the topic from a sociological lens, and drawing on influential writing from other fields, including history, economics, anthropology, and medicine, editors Carole Joffe and Jennifer Reich are assured and accessible guides as they lead readers across six core thematic areas analyzing reproductive self-determination and why it matters. From a reproductive justice perspective, the new edition examines issues related to contraception and sterilization, abortion, pregnancy, maternal-fetal conflicts, and uses of reproductive technologies. Readers will encounter classical texts that have contributed to the foundation of this exciting field, as well as more recent research that continues to push the field forward, all in the service of sharpening their understanding of why reproductive politics have been and continue to be contentious, complicated, and high stakes. Refreshed and significantly expanded, with over two dozen new selections, the second edition of this reader will have wide appeal for undergraduate and graduate students who are new to the study of reproduction, both in courses that focus on the topic across different disciplines and as a supplement to courses on the family, gender, health care, social problems, and sexuality.
Introduction: Reproduction and the Public Interest in Private Parts Section I. Controlling Reproduction 1. Reproductive Justice as Intersectional Feminist Activism 2. Expanding Opportunities for Women and Economic Uncertainty Are Both Factors in Declining US Fertility Rates 3. Forced Sterilization in the US Targeted Minorities and Those with Disabilities - and Lasted Into the 21st Century 4. Reproductive Justice for Disabled Women: Ending Systemic Discrimination 5. Letter to Maria Van Vorst on "Race Suicide" (1902) 6. Motherhood as Class Privilege in America 7. Reproducing Eugenics, Reproducing While Trans: The State of Sterilization of Trans People Section II. Contraception and Sterilization 8. The Folklore of Birth Control 9. The Pill - Genocide or Liberation? 10. The Feritily of Women of Mexican Origin: A Social Constructionist Approach 11. Dissatisfied with Birth Control? You're Not Alone 12. Male Birth Control Options Are in Development, but a Number of Barriers Still Stand in the Way 13. Agency-Without-Choice: The Visual Rhetorics of Long-Acting Reversible Contraception Promotion 14. What is Voluntary Sterilization? A Health Communication Expert Unpacks How Legacy of Forced Sterilization Shapes Doctor-Patient Conversations Today 15. Bishops and Bodies: Doctrinal Iatrogenesis 16. Without Birth Control Help, Marine’s Readiness Suffers Section III. Abortion 17. U.S. Medicine and the Marginalization of Abortion 18. How A Supreme Court Decision Limiting Access to Abortion Could Harm the Economy and Women’s Well-Being 19. Selections from Life’s Work: A Moral Argument for Choice 20. When Abortion at a Clinic Is Not Available, 1 in 3 Pregnant People Say They Will Do Something on Their Own to End the Pregnancy 21. The end of Roe v. Wade and the new landscape of abortion access in the United States 22. Less Than 1% of Abortions Take Place in the Third Trimester – Here’s Why People Get Them 23. Beyond Abortion: The Consequences of Overturning Roe 24. What You Need to Know about Surveillance and Reproductive Rights in a Post Roe V Wade World Section IV. Fetal Rights and Constructions of Maternal-Fetal Conflicts 25. Reproduction in Bondage 26. The Policy and Politics of Reproductive Health Motherhood Preconceived: The Emergence of the Preconception Health and Health Care Initiative 27. Coercive and Punitive Governmental Responses to Women's Conduct During Pregnancy 28. Selections from Jailcare: Finding the Safety Net for Women Behind Bars 29. Changing Roles of Doctors and Nurses: Hospital Snitches and Police Informants 30. “Black Children Are an Endangered Species”: Examining Racial Framing in Social Movements Section V. Pregnancy and Birth 31. The Biomedical Subjectification of Women of Advanced Maternal Age: Reproductive Risk, Privilege, and the Illusion of Control 32. “I'm Just a Woman Having a Baby”: Negotiating and Resisting the Problematization of Pregnancy Fatness 33. Maternal Mortality in the United States: A Primer 34. Obstetric Racism: The Racial Politics of Pregnancy, Labor, and Birthing 35. Stratified Reproduction and Prenatal Genetics in a Post-Roe United States 36. Transgender Men and Nonbinary People Are Asked to Stop Testosterone Therapy During Pregnancy – But the Evidence for This Guidance Is Still Murky 37. What Causes Miscarriages? A Doctor Explains Why Women Shouldn’t Blame Themselves 38. Pregnant on the Other Side of the Border 39. The Liability Threat in Obstetrics Section VI. Reproductive Technology 40. Infertility and IVF Access in the United States: A Human Rights-Based Policy Approach 41. Selling Genes, Selling Gender 42. Male Fertility Is Declining – Studies Show That Environmental Toxins Could Be a Reason 43. Making the Ethnic Embryo: Enacting Race in US Embryo Adoption 44. The ‘Chore’ of Having Sex to Try to Get Pregnant 45. The Belly Mommy and the Fetus Sitter: The Reproductive Marketplace and Family Intimacies 46. India’s Reproductive Assembly Line 47. Do Embryos have Kinship? Negotiating Meanings of Relatedness in the Fertility Clinic 48. Who’s Your Daddy? Don’t Ask a DNA Test
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