2017
DOI: 10.1177/1363459317693403
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Hooked on a feeling? Exploring desires and ‘solutions’ in infertility accounts given by women with ‘atypical’ sex development

Abstract: Sociocultural meanings accorded to infertility, and rapid developments in assisted reproductive technologies, have long been central concerns in feminist and social scientific research. However, knowledge is scarce concerning how individuals make sense of infertility when it is disclosed in adolescence, for example as the result of an 'atypical' sex development, rather than as a result of failed conception. This article examines how understandings of desires, kinship and 'solutions' take shape and are negotiat… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Equating the absence of a uterus with being involuntarily childless risks glossing over the fact that not all women with UFI desire UTx-IVF. This equation, we hold, is problematic, since it reinforces ideas about an unmet need for UTx-IVF and assumptions about women’s reproductive desires and the desire for a uterus although research into the perspectives of women with UFI is very scarce (see however Guntram 2018).…”
Section: Utx-ivf In Sweden: Defining the Problem(s) Finding The Solumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equating the absence of a uterus with being involuntarily childless risks glossing over the fact that not all women with UFI desire UTx-IVF. This equation, we hold, is problematic, since it reinforces ideas about an unmet need for UTx-IVF and assumptions about women’s reproductive desires and the desire for a uterus although research into the perspectives of women with UFI is very scarce (see however Guntram 2018).…”
Section: Utx-ivf In Sweden: Defining the Problem(s) Finding The Solumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infertility is not a new theme in feminist scholarship. Given the centrality traditionally ascribed to reproduction in normative models of femininity, several feminist authors (Thompson, 2002;Shanley & Asch, 2009;Guntram, 2018) have addressed the issue of involuntary childlessness over the decades, stressing, for example, how the essentialist notion of motherhood as necessary to womanhood characterises a source of particular suffering and stigma for women diagnosed as infertile. In recent years, however, issues of women's reproductive health have become increasingly prominent in feminist literature, particularly in the context of current debates about the political, economic, and cultural implications of the emergence of new reproductive technologies (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1: 105–21. 10.1177/146470011246857; Lisa Guntram (2018) , ’Hooked on a Feeling? Exploring Desires and ’Solutions’ in Infertility Accounts Given by Women with ’Atypical’ Sex Development’, Health 22, no.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%