Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social issues > Ethical issues & debates > Abortion
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The Foetal Condition - A Sociology of Engendering and Abortion (Paperback)
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The Foetal Condition - A Sociology of Engendering and Abortion (Paperback)
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Abortion is a contentious issue in social life but it has rarely
been subjected to careful scrutiny in the social sciences. While
the legalization of abortion has brought it into the public domain,
it still remains a sensitive topic in many cultures, often hidden
from view and rarely spoken about, consigned to a shadowy
existence. Drawing on reports gathered from hospital settings and
in-depth interviews with women who have had abortions, Luc
Boltanski sets out to explain the ambiguous status of this social
practice. Abortion, he argues, has to remain in the shadows, for it
reveals a contradiction at the heart of the social contract: the
principle of the uniqueness of beings conflicts with the postulate
of their replaceable nature, a postulate without which no society
would achieve demographic renewal. This leads Boltanski to explore
the way human beings are engendered and to analyze the symbolic
constraints that preside over their entry into society. What makes
a human being is not the foetus as such, ensconced within the body,
but rather the process by which it is taken up symbolically in
speech - that is, its symbolic adoption. But this symbolic adoption
presupposes the possibility of discriminating among embryos that
are indistinguishable. For society, and sometimes for individuals,
the arbitrary character of this discrimination is hard to tolerate.
The contradiction is made bearable, Boltanski shows, by a
grammatical categorization: the "project" foetus - adopted by its
parents, who use speech to welcome the new being and give it a name
- is juxtaposed to the "tumoral" foetus, an accidental embryo that
will not be the object of a life-forming project. Bringing together
grammar, narrations of life experience and an historical
perspective, this highly original book sheds fresh light on a
social phenomenon that is widely practised but poorly understood.
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