Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6852860 Women's Studies International Forum 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The article is set against India's pronatalist ethos and fertility industry that fetishize biological motherhood as natural and real. To counter its bio-centric paradigm of mother-making, it forefronts and juxtaposes the adoptive (non-birth-but-legal) mother with the surrogate (birth-giver-but-legal non-mother) to mirror the flux and constructedness of 'real' motherhood. I use a poststructuralist frame to examine their non-normative 'choice' and complex agentic struggles. Seeking legitimacy as ethical maternal subjects, they both reimagine and/or reify the normative maternal. I also focus on their absent antithetical counterparts - the birth and commissioning mother - to highlight how socio-legal structures and logic either fail to recognize or attempt to hide non-patriarchal motherhood. Since this constellation of 'mothers' points to the discursivity of the maternal, I argue that the non-corporeal formative elements of motherhood be emphasized. I urge a shift from the feminist preoccupation with choice towards intersectional structural realities that trigger/limit agency and, ultimately, human relatedness.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
Authors
,