“…A growing number of STS authors describe the important role that culturally entrenched routines, practices and ways of reasoning play in how people relate to science and technology in general (for example, Hecht, 2001;Jasanoff, 2005) and biomedicine and genetic testing in particular (for example, Felt et al, 2008Felt et al, , 2010Gibbon et al, 2010): people do not simply embrace or refuse genetic testing; rather, they engage in complex negotiations that include different experiences with science and technology, historically grounded visions of governance and politics, and culturally entrenched ideas of health, illness and the bodily self. In their comparative study of how people come to terms with two different biomedical technologies (organ transplantation and post-natal genetic testing) in France, the Netherlands and Austria, Felt et al (2010) have shown that by offering shared discursive resources and broader sociotechnical imaginaries (Jasanoff and Kim, 2009) different national technopolitical cultures matter deeply.…”