A new history of the concept of fetal life in the human sciences At a
time when the becoming of a human being in a woman’s body has, once
again, become a fraught issue—from abortion debates and surrogacy
controversies to prenatal diagnoses and assessments of fetal risk—Of
Human Born presents the largely unknown history of how the human
sciences came to imagine the unborn in terms of “life before
birth.” Caroline Arni shows how these sciences created the concept
of “fetal life” by way of experimenting on animals, pregnant
women, and newborns; how they worried about the influence of the
expectant mother’s living conditions; and how they lingered on the
question of the beginnings of human subjectivity. Such were the
concerns of physiologists, pediatricians, psychologists, and
psychoanalysts as they advanced the novel discipline of embryology
while, at the same time, grappling with age-old questions about the
coming-into-being of a human person. Of Human Born thus draws
attention to the fundamental way in which modern approaches to the
unborn have been intertwined with the configuration of “the human”
in the age of scientific empiricism. Arni revises the narrative that
the “modern embryo” is quintessentially an embryo disembedded from
the pregnant woman’s body. On the contrary, she argues that the
concept of fetal life cannot be separated from its dependency on the
maternal organism, countering the rhetorical discourses that have
fueled the recent rollback of abortion rights in the United States.
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Fetal Lives, 1800–1950
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781942130901
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Vendor
Zone Books
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter