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Reproductive Technology and the Commodification of Life
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1988
Year
FertilityReproductive HealthGynecologyMaternity ServiceReproductive BiologyCommodification ProcessReproduction ResponseEmbryologyReproductive BiotechnologyReproductive EthicBioethicsObstetricsPrenatal CarePublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthInfertilityMaternal ComplicationMaternal HealthPrenatal DiagnosisMarketingMidwiferyReproductive TechnologyAbortionPregnancyTechnologyMedicineNew Reproduction Technology
This paper suggests that the key unifying concept in the development and application of new reproduction technology has been the increasing commodification of life--treating people and parts of people as marketable commodities. This commodification process is made most dramatically clear in (1) prenatal diagnosis, in which the fetus is treated as a product subject to quality control measures and women are treated as producers without emotional tie to their products and (2) in so-called "surrogacy" arrangements in which an actual price tag is placed on pregnancy, and women sell both their "labor" and their "product."