Man-Made Women: How New Reproductive Technologies Affect Women
English
By (author): Betty Hoskins Gena Corea Helen B. Holmes Jalna Hanmer Janice Raymond Madhu Kishwar Renate Duelli Klein Roberta Steinbacher Robyn Rowland
In the early 1980s the new reproductive technologies available supposedly offered infertile women a chance to have children. However, there was growing concern that the determination of scientists to dominate nature, their disregard for womens well-being, and the financial gains to be made from these technologies would together result in the increased modification of all womens lives and the loss of even more control over our own bodies.
Originally published in 1985, the essays in Man-Made Women describe the technologies being used and researched in the areas of in vitro fertilization (test-tube babies), sex-predetermination and embryo transfer at the time. They discuss the practical application of the technologies on an international scale and draw attention to the racist and classist assumptions on which they are based. There is also information about the international action that feminists had begun to counter these so-called benevolent and therapeutic technologies.
Man-Made Women hoped to encourage women to start questioning the miracle of these new reproductive technologies and to become involved in crucial decisions about their bodies and their lives.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 20 Nov 2024