This article argues that the dominant social and cultural representations of IVF as successful, and of reproduction as the natural and inevitable life course, particularly for women, offer those for whom treatment fails a limited set of discursive resources through which to make sense of that experience. The article explores the ways in which those resources are both deployed and resisted by those who have experienced treatment failure, and who have since stopped treatment, in order to establish themselves as “normal”. It is argued that through the construction of themselves as meeting rather than transgressing the normative social and cultural reproductive standards, the participants can be seen to discretely subvert and redefine the dominant discourses of both technology and reproduction, even while appearing to shore them up.
2021. Single Mothers as Bricoleurs: Crafting Embryos and Kin. Journal of Family Issues 42:1 ► pp. 58 ff.
Weitz, Ylva Spånberger & Marie Karlsson
2021. Professional or authentic motherhood? Negotiations on the identity of the birth mother in the context of foster care. Qualitative Social Work 20:3 ► pp. 703 ff.
Parton, Chloe, Jane M. Ussher & Janette Perz
2019. Hope, burden or risk: a discourse analytic study of the construction and experience of fertility preservation in the context of cancer. Psychology & Health 34:4 ► pp. 456 ff.
Hanna, Esmée, Brendan Gough & Nicky Hudson
2018. Fit to father? Online accounts of lifestyle changes and help‐seeking on a male infertility board. Sociology of Health & Illness 40:6 ► pp. 937 ff.
Botes, W. M., M. Nöthling Slabbert, M. Alessandrini & M. S. Pepper
2016. Stem Cell Therapy: Accepted Therapies, Managing the Hope of Society, and a Legal Perspective. In Stem Cell Processing [Stem Cells in Clinical Applications, ], ► pp. 1 ff.
de Groot, Marije, Eline Dancet, Sjoerd Repping, Mariette Goddijn, Dominic Stoop, Fulco van der Veen & Trudie Gerrits
2016. Perceptions of oocyte banking from women intending to circumvent age‐related fertility decline. Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica 95:12 ► pp. 1396 ff.
2016. Energy Biographies. Science, Technology, & Human Values 41:3 ► pp. 483 ff.
Czarnecki, Danielle
2015. Moral Women, Immoral Technologies. Gender & Society 29:5 ► pp. 716 ff.
Boden, Jane
2013. The ending of treatment: The ending of hope?. Human Fertility 16:1 ► pp. 22 ff.
Vassard, D., R. Lund, A. Pinborg, J. Boivin & L. Schmidt
2012. The impact of social relations among men and women in fertility treatment on the decision to terminate treatment. Human Reproduction 27:12 ► pp. 3502 ff.
Stuart-smith, Susan J., Jonathan A. Smith & Elizabeth J. Scott
2011. Treatment decision making in anonymous donor eggin-vitrofertilisation: A qualitative study of childless women and women with genetically related children. Human Fertility 14:2 ► pp. 97 ff.
Kielty, Sandra
2008. Working Hard to Resist a 'Bad Mother' Label. Qualitative Social Work 7:3 ► pp. 363 ff.
Kirkman, Maggie
2008. Being a ‘real’ mum: Motherhood through donated eggs and embryos. Women's Studies International Forum 31:4 ► pp. 241 ff.
Raudaskoski, Pirkko & Paul McIlvenny
2008. Identity Work and Transnational Adoption: Discursive Representations of the ‘Adoptive-Parent-To-Be’ in the Satellite Texts of a Danish TV Documentary Series. In Identity Trouble, ► pp. 58 ff.
Sweeney, Jennifer K.
2008. Transforming the rational perspective on skill development: The Dreyfus model in library reference work [Advances in Library Administration and Organization, 26], ► pp. 1 ff.
Peters, Kathleen, Debra Jackson & Trudy Rudge
2007. “It Just Alienated Us”. Advances in Nursing Science 30:3 ► pp. E25 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Conclusion. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 181 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Disentangling the Embryonic Gift. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 59 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Notes. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 189 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Commodity-Communities and Corporate Commons. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 135 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Blood Banks, Risk, and Autologous Donation. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 35 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. The Laws of Mo(o)re. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 88 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Bibliography. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 207 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Real-Time Demand. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 160 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Introduction. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 1 ff.
[no author supplied]
2006. Umbilical Cord Blood. In Tissue Economies, ► pp. 110 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 25 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.