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Shouldering Moral Responsibility: The Division of Moral Labor among Pregnant Women, Rabbis, and Doctors
Author(s) -
Ivry Tsipy,
Teman Elly
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
american anthropologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.51
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1548-1433
pISSN - 0002-7294
DOI - 10.1111/aman.13314
Subject(s) - morality , sociology , ethnography , power (physics) , moral responsibility , division of labour , emic and etic , outsourcing , biomedicine , moral economy , law , political science , anthropology , politics , biology , genetics , physics , quantum mechanics
ABSTRACT This article contributes to the anthropology of morality through an ethnographic focus on the consultations of religiously observant Jews with rabbis and medical specialists regarding dilemmas surrounding prenatal diagnosis of fetal anomalies. Our ethnography looks at religious couples who consult rabbinic authorities on their reproductive dilemmas rather than making autonomous decisions and the procedures of decision‐making that rabbis enact. We examine the rabbis’ emic practice of dividing moral labor and outsourcing it in a chain reaction to various medical and rabbinic experts. The purpose of outsourcing moral decisions and aggregating expert opinions is to lighten the heavy weight of moral responsibility for consultees as well as for the rabbinic consultants. In seeking expert consultations, people might actually be opting for liberation from freedom of choice—at least as defined in the model of autonomous decision‐making—rather than merely submitting to an authoritative doctrinarian power, whether of religion or biomedicine. [ moral labor, religion, prenatal diagnosis, biomedicine, Orthodox Jews ]

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