Bodily exchanges, bioethics and border crossing : perspectives on giving, selling and sharing bodies
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Bibliographic Information
Bodily exchanges, bioethics and border crossing : perspectives on giving, selling and sharing bodies
(Routledge studies in the sociology of health and illness)
Routledge, 2016
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Medical therapy, research and technology enable us to make our bodies, or parts of them, available to others in an increasing number of ways. This is the case in organ, tissue, egg and sperm donation as well as in surrogate motherhood and clinical research. Bringing together leading scholars working on the ethical, social and cultural aspects of such bodily exchanges, this cutting-edge book develops new ways of understanding them.
Bodily Exchanges, Bioethics and Border Crossing both probes the established giving and selling frameworks for conceptualising bodily exchanges in medicine, and seeks to develop and examine another, less familiar framework: that of sharing. A framework of sharing can capture practices that involve giving up and giving away part of one's body, such as organ and tissue donation, and practices that do not, such as surrogacy and research participation. Sharing also recognizes the multiple relationalities that these exchanges can involve and invites inquiry into the context in which they occur. In addition, the book explores the multiple forms of border crossing that bodily exchanges in medicine involve, from the physical boundaries of the body to relational borders - as can happen in surrogacy - to national borders and the range of ethical issues that these various border-crossings can give rise to.
Engaging with anthropology, sociology, philosophy, and feminist and postcolonical perspectives, this is an original and timely contribution to contemporary bioethics in a time of increasing globalization. It will be of use to students and researchers from a range of humanities and social science backgrounds as well as medical and other healthcare professionals with an interest in bioethics.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Bodily Exchanges, Bioethics and Border Crossing 2. The Lived Body and Personal Identity: The Ontology of Exiled Body Parts 3. Putting the Gift Relationship to Test: The Peculiar Case of Research on Discarded Human Tissue 4. "I Wouldn't Put Them on eBay!" Discourses on Money, Markets and Meanings amongst IVF Patients Volunteering for a UK "Egg Sharing for Research" Scheme 5. Sharing Organs for Transplantation: Altruism as Kagandahang Loob 6. Sharing Amidst Scarcity: The Commons as Innovative Transgression in Xeno- and Allo- Transplant Science 7. Sharing the Embodied Experience of Pregnancy: The Case of Surrogate Motherhood 8. Relational Ontology and Ethics in Online Organ Solicitation: The Problem of Sharing One's Body when Being Touched Online 9. The Transplant Imaginary and Its Postcolonial Hauntings 10. Managing Hope and Spiritual Distress: The Centrality of the Doctor-Patient Relationship in Combatting Stem Cell Travel 11. International Clinical Research and the Problem of Benefiting from Injustice 12. The Ethics of Transactions in an Unjust World 13. Concluding Reflections: Bodily Exchanges as Sharing
by "Nielsen BookData"