Victoria Boydell (University of Essex, UK), Katharine Dow (University of Cambridge, UK)
>Human reproduction is mediated through many technologies, both high- and low-tech. These technologies of reproduction are not experienced in isolation by most of the people who use them. However clinical, public health and social scientific research often reflects a parcelling out of reproduction into specialist areas of biomedical intervention. Studies tend to be bound to specific physiological events, technologies (particularly those that are more obviously technical or ‘modern’) and people – namely cis, heterosexual, white, middle-class women. Yet, with the ever-expanding horizon of...
>Human reproduction is mediated through many technologies, both high- and low-tech. These technologies of reproduction are not experienced in isolatio...