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As Carole Browner explains in her foreword: ""These chapters
compellingly reveal that although we anthropologists tend to speak
of biomedicine in hegemonic terms, in fact its penetration is quite
variable and often ambivalently met. . . . Risk, Reproduction, and
Narratives of Experience sheds new light on a troubling core aspect
of medicalisation processes, which simultaneously render pregnant
women more docile subjects even as they are impelled to actively
engage with biomedicalised prenatal care regimes. . . . We also see
that a consummate means by which states seek to consolidate power
in the reproductive realm is through expansion of the biomedical
concept of risk. This critical observation emerges repeatedly in
this collection.""
As Carole Browner explains in her foreword: ""These chapters
compellingly reveal that although we anthropologists tend to speak
of biomedicine in hegemonic terms, in fact its penetration is quite
variable and often ambivalently met. . . . Risk, Reproduction, and
Narratives of Experience sheds new light on a troubling core aspect
of medicalisation processes, which simultaneously render pregnant
women more docile subjects even as they are impelled to actively
engage with biomedicalised prenatal care regimes. . . . We also see
that a consummate means by which states seek to consolidate power
in the reproductive realm is through expansion of the biomedical
concept of risk. This critical observation emerges repeatedly in
this collection.""
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