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Natalie Fixmer-Oraiz is an assistant professor of communication studies and gender, women's, and sexuality studies at the University of Iowa.

Opere di Natalie Fixmer-Oraiz

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After the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001, it became almost treason not to increase the number of white babies in the USA. Abortion became anathema, and the state began stepping in between doctors and pregnant and even pre-pregnant women. In other words, biopolitics is all about white supremacy, says Natalie Fixmer-Oraiz. She is very clear on this in her straight-shooting new book, Homeland Maternity.

Women are not only not allowed control of their bodies, but government will ensure their unborn are treated the way it wants, and not the way the mother intends. As government turns off aid and assistance, it has turned up enforcement, putting pregnant women in daily jeopardy. There are publicity campaigns encouraging women to become mothers, and lies about droves of women abandoning their careers to become mothers. The nation is, apparently, at risk, and every woman has a patriotic duty to provide new (white preferred) recruits.

“The concept of fetal personhood regularly eclipses claims to reproductive or maternal rights, in which pregnancy itself is regularly medicalized and managed by experts, a culture in which risk in any form – but particularly that related to the future of the nation and its citizenry – is to be avoided at all costs,” she says. It is no longer acceptable to carry a pregnancy to term without medical supervision and meds. And at any time, a doctor, nurse or receptionist can turn a patient in for government oversight, if not incarceration, if they don’t like an expectant mother’s behavior or even history.

Women are considered a threat to their pregnancies unless they succeed. The list of legal penalties is disgusting. Women are held criminally liable for negative pregnancy outcomes. A woman in a coma was kept alive to preserve a fetus that had zero chance of survival, despite the woman’s advance directive and her family’s wishes. Another was charged with murdering her fetus after she fainted and fell down stairs. An Indiana woman was convicted of both child neglect and feticide after suffering a miscarriage. And ironically, such women are refused prenatal care while in custody. Their private medical data is made public, they are prosecuted for failing to come to term. One was even charged with murder when her attempted suicide failed.

She opens with what I hope is the most odious story of all, the Loertscher case, which is still active in the courts system. Tamara Loertscher was charged with contravening Wisconsin’s Unborn Child Protection Act. She was incarcerated, forced to undergo continual drug tests (at her own expense) as part of parole, classified as a child abuser and denied legal representation (though the state appointed one for her fetus). Her crime was to admit to her own doctor she had taken methamphetamines and marijuana in lieu of prescription drugs she could not afford for her hypothyroidism and depression – before her pregnancy. In jail, she was denied prenatal care, threatened with a Taser and put in solitary.

American women are under surveillance at all times. Anyone can call the authorities if they suspect a woman has had a miscarriage or an abortion. The whole misanthropic legal system comes down on her. Then, the final knife twist of hypocrisy comes when the child is born, and there is no medical help or followup. Healthcare for the born is only for those rich enough. But America can’t do enough for a fetus.

The book covers several broad areas, like egg-freezing and infertility clinics, legal madness, emergency contraception (morning-after pills), pregnancy centers and the influence of cultural media, where Fixmer-Oraiz spends way too much time examining films and reality TV depicting the angst of teen pregnancy.

It moves swiftly, despite Fixmer-Oraiz’ use of long, scientific and academic words, a tribute to her style. On the other hand, she has some pet words that crop up far too many times, and become distracting and annoying. Words like synecdoche and undergird appear at least 20 times each, more than I’ve ever seen them in total in my life. And there is the ever-pompous Thus, which also appears a good 20 times. A little editing would make them less obvious and so less distracting, because the message itself is hugely important.

It’s not just no control over their own bodies. Women are being made ever more powerless while also being held totally responsible. Here, in 21st century America.

David Wineberg
… (altro)
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DavidWineberg | Nov 29, 2018 |

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