Un/familiar connections: on the relevance of a sociology of personal life for exploring egg and sperm donation

Sociology of Health & Illness
Petra Nordqvist

Abstract

In recent decades, reproductive medicine has become a widespread global phenomenon. Within the field, donor conception, and the use of donated eggs, sperm or embryos from a third party, plays a key role. Despite the importance of those individuals who donate, there has been scant research exploring their experiences. Seeking to contribute to the growing, albeit still small, body of research on donors, this paper advocates bringing the process of donating into dialogue with a sociology of personal life. It suggests that important new insights about the donor experience can be achieved by utilising such a theoretical perspective. The paper applies a broad framework of a sociology of personal life to demonstrate that the decision to donate reverberates within donors' everyday lives and relationships, and explores, primarily theoretically, how it is that acts of donation bring such issues into play. To this end, the paper examines in detail three ways in which donating interacts with dimensions that are integral to personal life: "living" genetic connectedness, relationality and the intimate body. Ultimately, the paper suggests that a sociology of personal life shows light on new, unexplored questions for this field that demand gre...Continue Reading

References

Jun 1, 1996·Social Science & Medicine·K R Daniels, G M Lewis
Aug 3, 2002·The Journal of Organic Chemistry·Anna BengtsonAnders Hallberg
Jun 21, 2005·Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology·K DanielsO Lalos
Apr 12, 2007·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Marilyn A CrawshawKen D Daniels
Feb 5, 2010·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Vasanti JadvaSusan Golombok
Feb 15, 2012·Human Fertility : Journal of the British Fertility Society·Jennifer M Speirs
Oct 16, 2012·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·K R DanielsM V Perez-y-Perez
Oct 22, 2013·Fertility and Sterility·Bjørn BayHans Jakob Ingerslev
Feb 20, 2014·Human Reproduction·Maggie KirkmanKarin Hammarberg
Oct 16, 2016·Qualitative Health Research·Sonja Goedeke, Ken Daniels

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