Testing Women, Testing the Fetus: The Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America

Author:   Rayna Rapp
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415916448


Pages:   376
Publication Date:   04 August 1999
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Testing Women, Testing the Fetus: The Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America


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Overview

This work explores the complex and contradictory nature of prenatal diagnosis and its social impact and cultural meaning through the narratives of the people who have experienced it. Rich with the voices and stories of participants, these touching firsthand accounts examine how women of diverse racial, ethnic, class and religious backgrounds perceive prenatal testing. This Pandora's box of moral issues has prompted complex questions such as: What do women want and not want from technology in pregnancy?; What conditions are ""worth"" an abortion?; And how do women receiving a ""bad"" diagnosis cope with their ultimate decisions?

Full Product Details

Author:   Rayna Rapp
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.860kg
ISBN:  

9780415916448


ISBN 10:   0415916445
Pages:   376
Publication Date:   04 August 1999
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

... this is a wonderful book, ranging far beyond mere amniocentesis....Rayna Rapp has created a biting and sometimes humorous commentary abot how medical and scientific information is disseminated, absorbed and acted upon....Rapp tells a fascinating story about amniocentesis as social process, exploring the topic from historical, cultural and linguistic perspectives....One of the most refreshing things about the book is its readability. The personal narrative weaves a web of experience that the reader immediately shares. - The Women's Review of Books By observing genetic counselors at work and talking to families raising children with disabilities, [Rapp] discovers the practical problems connecte with testing and the different responses to pregnancy, family life, and disability in diverse ethnic groups and social classes. - Library Journal Rapp's deep analysis is relevant to women of every ethnic, religious and class background and asks the necessary questions preceding each potentially difficult choice. - Daily News [A] monumental and challenging study....[a] rigorous illumination of both the scientific and the social practices of amniocentesis. So impressive is this achievement, indeed, that I think it possible to say that Testing Women, Testing the Fetus may provide us with a model of intellectual deportment that anthropologists, genetic counselors, medical professionals, bioethicists, research scientists, and even cultural critics -- yes them too -- will do well to acknowledge and emulate. -Michael Berube, Tikkun If you like to know everything about a subject before making a decision--and you're facing an amnio--you'll get support andinformation from Testing Women, Testing the Fetus. . . Rapp . . . shares a wide variety of compelling human stories that are rarely told. - Colorado Parent, Feb. 2000


Testing Women, Testing the Fetus is a compelling ethnography of the lived experience of geneticization of American society. It is a deeply human account of the embeddedness of reproductive technologies in fundamental social processes involving gender, class, political economy, and moral contestation. From family homes through clinics and hospitals to laboratories and disability settings, this incisive study takes the reader across a huge landscape of people and power participating in technological transformation in America. A richly rewarding read! -- Arthur Kleinman, M.D., Presley Professor of Medical Anthropology, Harvard University If you like to know everything about a subject before making a decision--and you're facing an amnio--you'll get support and information from Testing Women, Testing the Fetus...Rapp shares a wide variety of compelling human stories that are rarely told. -- Colorado Parent [A] monumental and challenging study...A rigorous illumination of both the scientific and the social practices of amniocentesis. So impressive is this achievement, indeed, that I think it possible to say that Testing Women, Testing the Fetus may provide us with a model of intellectual deportment that anthropologists, genetic counselors, medical professionals, bioethicists, research scientists, and even cultural critics--yes them too--will do well to acknowledge and emulate. -- Tikkun This is a complicated late-twentieth-century tale in which we never lose sight of the human minds and persons behind it. An account shot through with quite dazzling perceptions of particular, located dilemmas which epitomize the intersections of genetic knowledge, prejudice and diagnosis. With remarkable skill, the author brings each dilemma back to its moment of human impact. A rare book in the field, it documents in vivid detail the complexity of the social circumstances surrounding genetic testing, quite as much as the cultural and technological. This brilliant study has been long awaited--it will exceed expectations. -- Marilyn Strathern, Professor of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University and author of The Gender of the Gift Rapp's deep analysis is relevant to women of every ethnic, religious and class background and asks the necessary questions preceding each potentially difficult choice. -- Daily News By observing genetic counselors at work and talking to families raising children with disabilities, [Rapp] discovers the practical problems connecte with testing and the different responses to pregnancy, family life, and disability in diverse ethnic groups and social classes. -- Library Journal In addition to tracing how genetic counselors' focus on individual choice can mask social context, Rapp also reveals how women, with or without partners, negotiate the important decision whether or not to undergo the test...A valuable exploration of the moral and personal decisions involved in bringing a pregnancy to term. -- Publishers Weekly [An] ethnographically innovative book in more than metaphorical ways...Chronicles the struggles, despair, hope, relief, confusion, exhilaration, and, above all, the thoughtfulness of pregnant women as they come to fraught decisions about which children will or will not be born. Rapp calls these women moral pioneers because, willing or not, they have become the moral philosophers of the private in the late twentieth-century United States. -- Donna Haraway, University of California at Santa Cruz This book marks a watershed in our anthropological understanding of how people in diverse walks of life are weaving genetic knowledge together with their concepts of parenthood, childhood, family, and work. Meticulously and thoroughly researched in multiple sites from genetics labs and genetics counselors' offices to the homes of families raising children with genetic anomalies, Rapp's work opens new horizons of understanding: she shows how distinctions along lines of class, religion, gender, sexuality, age, language, and ethnicity differently refract scientific genetic knowledge into social and cultural knowledge. Beautifully written and engrossing to read, this book is essential for teachers, researchers, and participants in the culture and politics of reproduction. -- Emily Martin, author of The Woman in the Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction Her books is arguably the definitive work on prenatal testing in the U.S. -- The Christian Century


"""Testing Women, Testing the Fetus is a compelling ethnography of the lived experience of geneticization of American society. It is a deeply human account of the embeddedness of reproductive technologies in fundamental social processes involving gender, class, political economy, and moral contestation. From family homes through clinics and hospitals to laboratories and disability settings, this incisive study takes the reader across a huge landscape of people and power participating in technological transformation in America. A richly rewarding read!"" -- Arthur Kleinman, M.D., Presley Professor of Medical Anthropology, Harvard University ""If you like to know everything about a subject before making a decision--and you're facing an amnio--you'll get support and information from Testing Women, Testing theFetus...Rapp shares a wide variety of compelling human stories that are rarely told."" -- Colorado Parent ""[A] monumental and challenging study...A rigorous illumination of both the scientific and the social practices of amniocentesis. So impressive is this achievement, indeed, that I think it possible to say that Testing Women, Testing the Fetus may provide us with a model of intellectual deportment that anthropologists, genetic counselors, medical professionals, bioethicists, research scientists, and even cultural critics--yes them too--will do well to acknowledge and emulate."" -- Tikkun ""This is a complicated late-twentieth-century tale in which we never lose sight of the human minds and persons behind it. An account shot through with quite dazzling perceptions of particular, located dilemmas which epitomize the intersections of genetic knowledge, prejudice and diagnosis. With remarkable skill, the author brings each dilemma back to its moment of human impact. A rare book in the field, it documents in vivid detail the complexity of the social circumstances surrounding genetic testing, quite as much as the cultural and technological. This brilliant study has been long awaited--it will exceed expectations."" -- Marilyn Strathern, Professor of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University and author of The Gender of the Gift ""Rapp's deep analysis is relevant to women of every ethnic, religious and class background and asks the necessary questions preceding each potentially difficult choice."" -- Daily News ""By observing genetic counselors at work and talking to families raising children with disabilities, [Rapp] discovers the practical problems connecte with testing and the different responses to pregnancy, family life, and disability in diverse ethnic groups and social classes."" -- Library Journal ""In addition to tracing how genetic counselors' focus on individual choice can mask social context, Rapp also reveals how women, with or without partners, negotiate the important decision whether or not to undergo the test...A valuable exploration of the moral and personal decisions involved in bringing a pregnancy to term."" -- Publishers Weekly ""[An] ethnographically innovative book in more than metaphorical ways...Chronicles the struggles, despair, hope, relief, confusion, exhilaration, and, above all, the thoughtfulness of pregnant women as they come to fraught decisions about which children will or will not be born. Rapp calls these women moral pioneers because, willing or not, they have become the moral philosophers of the private in the late twentieth-century United States."" -- Donna Haraway, University of California at Santa Cruz ""This book marks a watershed in our anthropological understanding of how people in diverse walks of life are weaving genetic knowledge together with their concepts of parenthood, childhood, family, and work. Meticulously and thoroughly researched in multiple sites from genetics labs and genetics counselors' offices to the homes of families raising children with genetic anomalies, Rapp's work opens new horizons of understanding: she shows how distinctions along lines of class, religion, gender, sexuality, age, language, and ethnicity differently refract scientific genetic knowledge into social and cultural knowledge. Beautifully written and engrossing to read, this book is essential for teachers, researchers, and participants in the culture and politics of reproduction."" -- Emily Martin, author of The Woman inthe Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction ""Her books is arguably the definitive work on prenatal testing in the U.S."" -- The Christian Century"


... this is a wonderful book, ranging far beyond mere amniocentesis....Rayna Rapp has created a biting and sometimes humorous commentary abot how medical and scientific information is disseminated, absorbed and acted upon....Rapp tells a fascinating story about amniocentesis as social process, exploring the topic from historical, cultural and linguistic perspectives....One of the most refreshing things about the book is its readability. The personal narrative weaves a web of experience that the reader immediately shares. - The Women's Review of Books By observing genetic counselors at work and talking to families raising children with disabilities, [Rapp] discovers the practical problems connecte with testing and the different responses to pregnancy, family life, and disability in diverse ethnic groups and social classes. - Library Journal Rapp's deep analysis is relevant to women of every ethnic, religious and class background and asks the necessary questions preceding each potentially difficult choice. - Daily News [A] monumental and challenging study....[a] rigorous illumination of both the scientific and the social practices of amniocentesis. So impressive is this achievement, indeed, that I think it possible to say that Testing Women, Testing the Fetus may provide us with a model of intellectual deportment that anthropologists, genetic counselors, medical professionals, bioethicists, research scientists, and even cultural critics -- yes them too -- will do well to acknowledge and emulate. -Michael Berube, Tikkun If you like to know everything about a subject before making a decision--and you're facing an amnio--you'll get support andinformation from Testing Women, Testing the Fetus. . . Rapp . . . shares a wide variety of compelling human stories that are rarely told. - Colorado Parent, Feb. 2000


... this is a wonderful book, ranging far beyond mere amniocentesis....Rayna Rapp has created a biting and sometimes humorous commentary abot how medical and scientific information is disseminated, absorbed and acted upon....Rapp tells a fascinating story about amniocentesis as social process, exploring the topic from historical, cultural and linguistic perspectives....One of the most refreshing things about the book is its readability. The personal narrative weaves a web of experience that the reader immediately shares. <br>- The Women's Review of Books <br> By observing genetic counselors at work and talking to families raising children with disabilities, [Rapp] discovers the practical problems connecte with testing and the different responses to pregnancy, family life, and disability in diverse ethnic groups and social classes. <br>- Library Journal <br> Rapp's deep analysis is relevant to women of every ethnic, religious and class background and asks the necessary questions preceding each potentially difficult choice. <br>- Daily News <br> [A] monumental and challenging study....[a] rigorous illumination of both the scientific and the social practices of amniocentesis. So impressive is this achievement, indeed, that I think it possible to say that Testing Women, Testing the Fetus may provide us with a model of intellectual deportment that anthropologists, genetic counselors, medical professionals, bioethicists, research scientists, and even cultural critics -- yes them too -- will do well to acknowledge and emulate. <br>-Michael Berube, Tikkun <br> If you like to know everything about a subject before making a decision--and you're facing an amnio--you'll get support andinformation from Testing Women, Testing the Fetus. . . Rapp . . . shares a wide variety of compelling human stories that are rarely told. <br>- Colorado Parent, Feb. 2000 <br>


Author Information

Rayna Rapp is Professor of Anthropology at the New School for Social Research and has been active in the movements to establish U.S. women's studies and reproductive rights for more than twenty-five years. Rapp has researched prenatal diagnosis as an anthropologist and as a feminist activist for over a decade, and is editor of the classic Toward an Anthropology of Women (1975) and co-editor of Conceiving the New World Order (1995).

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