Reproducing Jews: A Cultural Account of Assisted Conception in Israel (Body, Commodity, Text)
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #777233 in Books
- Published on: 2000-11
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 227 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
There are more fertility clinics per capita in Israel than in any other country in the world. This phenomenon is not the result of high rates of infertility but of the centrality and political importance that the Jewish community has placed on reproduction. It was this statistic that prompted Susan Martha Kahn to embark on an ethnographic study of the social uses, cultural meanings, and contemporary rabbinic responses to Israel's methods of artificial reproduction. To support her analytical perspectives Kahn draws on interviews with unmarried Israeli women who are using state-subsidised artificial insemination to get pregnant and her own experiences as a participant-observer in Israeli fertility clinics. After analysing rabbinic kinship cosmology through close readings of relevant traditional Jewish texts, she explains how new reproductive technologies have been accommodated and even embraced by orthodox rabbis in Israel.



