
Contents
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Making Extra Embryos Making Extra Embryos
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Sorting Embryos Out Sorting Embryos Out
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Freezing for the Future Freezing for the Future
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Embryo Fundamentalism Embryo Fundamentalism
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Disposition Disposition
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Birth of Embryo Adoption Birth of Embryo Adoption
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Fertile Terrain Fertile Terrain
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Cite
Abstract
Understanding how embryo adoption discourse became part of right-wing Christian politics requires tracing the dynamic social contexts through which the practice of embryo adoption emerged. Exploring the story of how IVF embryos are made and amassed in the United States, and what happens after fertility patients no longer desire them for personal use, takes us inside fertility clinics and situates their practices within the social conditions through which IVF became a well-established, loosely regulated, and highly lucrative industry. Chief among the social factors useful to consider is how the Christian Right’s pro-life opposition to legal abortion contributed to creating a deregulatory environment for ARTs that led directly to the amassment of IVF embryos—a fact that precipitated the rise of embryo adoption to address the perceived problem of embryonic life after IVF.
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