Donnerstag, 07. April 2016, 17:30 - 19:00 iCal
Vienna STS Talk Charlotte Kroløkke
Global Fluids. The Cultural Economy in Eggs and Urine.
Department of Science and Technology Studies / Seminar Room / Staircase II / 6th floor (NIG)
Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien
Vortrag
The body has become a goldmine of usable parts. In the United States, a woman may earn $20,000-35,000 as a surrogate; a sperm provider will receive in the range of $35-200 for his gametes, while egg donation ranges between $5,000-10,000. What may be considered bodily waste, excesses, usable parts, vacant bodies, or simply extractable material has contributed to an emerging relationship between the reproductive body, science and commerce.
This presentation is about the ways that pregnant women’s urine and women’s eggs have become exchangeable. In the case of women’s eggs, they move from being constructed as excess and wasteful material to becoming understood not only as gifts but also, as evident in the Spanish case and in the case of Danish women going to Spain for egg donation, as outgoing and loving potential. When eggs enter the fertility industry, they acquire a biography of their own frequently drawing upon conventional (and national) stereotypes, fantasies, and imaginations.
Veranstalter
Institut für Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung
Kontakt
Elisabeth Haslinger
Institut für Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung
01 4227 49601
elisabeth.haslinger@univie.ac.at
Erstellt am Mittwoch, 09. März 2016, 11:57
Letzte Änderung am Mittwoch, 09. März 2016, 14:36