Moderskab(elser) - Slægtsskabsøkonomier og moderfølelser i transnational surrogatmoderskab
Author(s) -
Karen Hvidtfeldt Madsen,
Charlotte Kroløkke
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
kvinder køn and forskning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2245-6937
pISSN - 0907-6182
DOI - 10.7146/kkf.v0i1-2.28501
Subject(s) - ideology , sociology , gender studies , reproduction , affect (linguistics) , natural (archaeology) , political science , politics , geography , law , communication , ecology , archaeology , biology
Today the making of families has gone global and may involve some sort of border crossing. In this essay, we discuss the ways that transnational surrogacy is constructed in two international and well-known documentaries Google Baby (Frank 2009) and Made in India (Haimowitz and Sinha 2010). Both films employ a neoliberal ideology and frame reproduction as a do-it-yourself project in which mobile and globalized homosexual and heterosexual couples from the West go to India to fulfill their desire for parenting. We suggest that affect theoretical perspectives assist in developing nuanced analyses of the ways that reproductive desire and despair circulate to make transnational surrogacy seem like a natural choice. We conclude that parenthood, in the two documentaries, is constructed along matters of intent and desire.
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