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Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 The Misogyny of Surrogacy : Disappearing Women as Mothers
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'In the billion-dollar global surrogacy trade, women are disappeared both as birth mothers and as genetic mothers (egg "donors"). Instead, they are viewed as breeders-gestational carriers, incubators, ovens - and invisibilised as anonymous egg "donors." Conversely, a sperm donor dad is proudly talking about being the "father of my own child." In this article, I address the misogyny of commodifying pregnant women to produce quality-tested "take-away babies" for money or love. As in prostitution, it is the rich who pay and the poor who serve-and lose the child they grew in their own bodies from their own flesh and bones over nine months. They also face potential harm to their short- and long-term health and fertility. Pregnant women lose control over their lives as they have to submit to harmful medications, numerous screenings for any "faults" their future child might have, possibly followed by foetal reduction or abortion. They also have no control over food selection and birth arrangements-all overseen by the patriarchal IVF industry that laughs all the way to the bank. As surrogacy appears to become mainstream, I suggest that we need a "mother revolution" in which women stand up and reclaim pregnancy and birth as life events in which they are fully in charge and refuse to obey a patriarchal medical miracle world. Surrogacy needs to be resisted by reducing demand. Stop surrogacy now.' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Hecate vol. 45 no. 1/2 Carole Ferrier (editor), Jena Woodhouse (editor), 2019 21220789 2019 periodical issue

    'The house husbands or SNAGS, a new phenomenon, did not see this as a permanent role and most, sooner or later, tired of a lack of life in the public sphere; despite a brief fashion for the male population's public job being private Home Duties, many men longed to re-enter the usual world; one in which important or sometimes stimulating things went on. The Australian Institute of Family Studies (in the government Department of Social Services) has regularly researched attitudes to gender roles within households in relation to things such as divided domestic work and has found, in its surveys, considerable support for shared housework. Other factors are in play in many countries, especially the incidence of child marriage (650 million girls) and of Female Genital Mutilation (imposed upon 200 million girls), the latter increasingly administered by actual health services rather than the stereotypical old, female relative with a razor blade and a sewing basket. The witches and midwives of centuries ago were one thing (documented, for example, in Barbara Ehrenreich's 1973 Witches, Midwives and Nurses) but more recently, in COVID-19 times, women are much in demand in their jobs/professions as health workers, and have been given enthusiastic encouragement to lead their working life in close contact with often viralent infections, as "essential workers"-a category that seems to have benefits for the bourgeoisie who belong to it, but not many for nurses working long and demanding shifts, wearing often-uncomfortable Personal Protective Equipment, in hospitals and infection-testing clinics.' (Carole Ferrier, Editorial introduction) 

    2019
    pg. 187-208, 310
Last amended 5 Mar 2021 07:50:28
187-208, 310 The Misogyny of Surrogacy : Disappearing Women as Motherssmall AustLit logo Hecate
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