Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria
Making a baby is a chapter-based ethnography of infertility treatments and the people who make use of them in Gauteng. There are four chapters, starting with 'Behind the Curtain'. In the first chapter, the context, both historical and theoretical, of this work is given. Difficulties expe...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-up-oai-repository.up.ac.za-2263-534582020-06-02T03:18:32Z Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria Botha, Nina Ebrahim-Vally, R. greensouptureen@gmail.com UCTD Making a baby is a chapter-based ethnography of infertility treatments and the people who make use of them in Gauteng. There are four chapters, starting with 'Behind the Curtain'. In the first chapter, the context, both historical and theoretical, of this work is given. Difficulties experienced in accessing people who are undergoing fertility treatments, difficulties in classifying the couples struggling to conceive discussed here as middle class (and why I choose to classify them as such) as well as outlining the history and development of infertility treatments in South Africa follows. Thereafter follows, a brief discussion of how other researchers have approached studying medical technologies, with special consideration for the work of Rayna Rapp. Following this is a discussion of who my informants are, and how my methodology was established and negotiated to effectively obtain the data enclosed here. The second chapter, 'Testosterone', deals with the 'external' world of infertility treatments. I argue that the most significant factor in accessing fertility treatments is money. The second factor is the doctors, where they studied and specialised, how they become specialists, where they practice, and the networks within which they function. Between money and doctors we find the medicines that are prescribed and genderised into the social categories (male or female, in this case) that they fit into. The third chapter, 'Oestrogen', deals with the internal world of fertility treatments. Internal in this context means both internal to a woman, and internal to the clinic rooms. The extreme levels of monitoring of the female body, the hospital that mimics the womb and finally, how these women attempt to become mothers, not just pregnant will be addressed in the chapter. Finally, this work concludes with 'Making a Baby'. Here I show how the context, as expressed in the first chapter, informs both kinds of definitions of infertility that of both the biomedical doctor, and that of the person undergoing such treatments. I show how the division between a body and a personality presupposes a unified body, especially when that division is expressed in an idiom of infertility treatments. I argue that social categories, technologies and technical knowledge related to infertility treatments are intimately related. Finally, I argue that in this process of making a baby, the nexus of this interrelationship is the category 'natural'. Dissertation (M(SocSci))--University of Pretoria, 2016. Anthropology and Archaeology M(SocSci) Unrestricted 2016-06-27T12:17:49Z 2016-06-27T12:17:49Z 2016-04-19 2016 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2263/53458 Botha, N 2016, Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria, M(SocSci) Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/53458> A2016 4316045 en © 2016 University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. University of Pretoria |
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UCTD Botha, Nina Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
description |
Making a baby is a chapter-based ethnography of infertility treatments and the people who make use
of them in Gauteng. There are four chapters, starting with 'Behind the Curtain'. In the first chapter, the
context, both historical and theoretical, of this work is given. Difficulties experienced in accessing people who
are undergoing fertility treatments, difficulties in classifying the couples struggling to conceive discussed here as
middle class (and why I choose to classify them as such) as well as outlining the history and development of
infertility treatments in South Africa follows. Thereafter follows, a brief discussion of how other researchers
have approached studying medical technologies, with special consideration for the work of Rayna Rapp.
Following this is a discussion of who my informants are, and how my methodology was established and
negotiated to effectively obtain the data enclosed here.
The second chapter, 'Testosterone', deals with the 'external' world of infertility treatments. I argue that
the most significant factor in accessing fertility treatments is money. The second factor is the doctors, where
they studied and specialised, how they become specialists, where they practice, and the networks within which
they function. Between money and doctors we find the medicines that are prescribed and genderised into the
social categories (male or female, in this case) that they fit into.
The third chapter, 'Oestrogen', deals with the internal world of fertility treatments. Internal in this
context means both internal to a woman, and internal to the clinic rooms. The extreme levels of monitoring of
the female body, the hospital that mimics the womb and finally, how these women attempt to become mothers,
not just pregnant will be addressed in the chapter.
Finally, this work concludes with 'Making a Baby'. Here I show how the context, as expressed in the
first chapter, informs both kinds of definitions of infertility that of both the biomedical doctor, and that of
the person undergoing such treatments. I show how the division between a body and a personality presupposes
a unified body, especially when that division is expressed in an idiom of infertility treatments. I argue that social
categories, technologies and technical knowledge related to infertility treatments are intimately related. Finally, I
argue that in this process of making a baby, the nexus of this interrelationship is the category 'natural'. === Dissertation (M(SocSci))--University of Pretoria, 2016. === Anthropology and Archaeology === M(SocSci) === Unrestricted |
author2 |
Ebrahim-Vally, R. |
author_facet |
Ebrahim-Vally, R. Botha, Nina |
author |
Botha, Nina |
author_sort |
Botha, Nina |
title |
Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
title_short |
Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
title_full |
Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
title_fullStr |
Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
title_full_unstemmed |
Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria |
title_sort |
making a baby : a social investigation of assisted reproductive technologies in and around pretoria |
publisher |
University of Pretoria |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/53458 Botha, N 2016, Making a Baby : a Social Investigation of Assisted reproductive Technologies in and around Pretoria, M(SocSci) Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/53458> |
work_keys_str_mv |
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