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Abortion Ecologies in Southern African Fiction - Transforming Reproductive Agency (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,085
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Abortion Ecologies in Southern African Fiction - Transforming Reproductive Agency (Hardcover)
Series: Critical Interventions in the Medical and Health Humanities
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Focusing on texts from the late 1970s to the 1990s which document
both changing attitudes to terminations of pregnancy and dramatic
environmental, medical, and socio-political developments during
southern Africa's liberation struggles, this book examines how four
writers from Botswana, South Africa, and Zimbabwe address the
ethics of abortion and reproductive choice. Viewing recent fiction
through the lens of new materialist theory - which challenges
conventional, individual-based notions of human rights by asserting
that all matter holds agency - this book argues that southern
African women writers anticipate and exceed current feminist
revivals of materialist thought. Not only do the authors question
contemporary discourse framing abortion as either a confirmation of
a woman's 'right to choose' or an unethical termination of human
life, but they challenge conventional understandings of
development, growth, and time. Through close readings of both
literal gestation in the selected texts and the metaphorical
reproduction of the post/colonial nation, this study advances the
concept of reproductive agency, creating a range of queer
ecocritical alternatives to tropes such as those of 'the Mother
Country', 'Mother Africa', or 'the birth of a nation'. This study
situates abortion narratives by Wilma Stockenstroem (translated by
J. M. Coetzee), Zoe Wicomb, Yvonne Vera, and Bessie Head alongside
contemporary postcolonial feminist theories, melding traditional
beliefs with materialist views to reconsider the future of
reproductive health matters in southern Africa. Merging queer
ecocritical perspectives from materialism and postcolonialism, this
study will appeal to students and researchers in the medical
humanities, new materialisms, and postcolonial studies.
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