Birds & bees : how nature and kinship are mobilized to support nuclear family narratives on fertility clinic websites.

Date

2008-11-12T21:56:19Z

Authors

Pender, Lisa Jane

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Abstract

This thesis explores how fertility clinics engage in various textual and visual strategies to locate nature and kinship in the context of the assisted conception technologies they offer. In particular, competing paradigms of modern technology solving problems of the body versus the “naturalness” of having a baby means that fertility clinics must mobilize particular understandings of nature and technology to bridge this gap. Additionally, fertility clinics draw upon culturally meaningful themes such as “birds and bees” to structure relationships among assisted conception technology participants. I argue that fertility clinic websites are public sites of discourse through which clinics both attempt to attract potential clients and shape understanding of assisted conception technology by offering particular explanations as real and natural.

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Keywords

Human fertility, Fertility clinics, Reproductive technology

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