This story is set during the future, the time of a Second Civil War, which was fought over reproductive rights. Due to the violent conflicts occurring in the war, many casualties are formed, and to solve this crisis, it was brought up that tithed or unwanted children could be unwound to transplant their organs to various donors. This solution created a problem for the characters in the book and raised a major conflict for them.…
Summary In this article Jennifer Parks brought up three radical feminists; Shulamith Firestone, Gena Corea and Janice Raymond, and their views. Starting with Firestone, who believed that there was another class division (sex class), and spoke of how woman's roles have been largely influenced by the male dominant culture. Shulamith Firestone understood that assisted reproductive technology could be a way for the masculine capitalist system to have further control over females, however she remained positive and was quoted saying “We shall assume flexibility and good intentions in those working out the change” (22). Firestone believed that this technology could open may doors that will liberate woman, making them…
Copulation, formation, and gestation are the stages needed to create an entirely original individual. Inside the mother’s womb, the fetus is filled with potential. All men are created equal, but not all men are treated equal. As soon as the baby is born, it is shackled and branded with labels of sex, religion, race, and region—labels that cast the baby into the minority or the majority just after birth. The baby then grows up into a world where it may be discriminated against, tossed aside, treated unequally.…
1st Essay Since the beginning of history, women have been commended on their natural ability to nurture and their ability to not only nurture children, but everything they take interest in. Unfortunately their interests have always been limited. They are denied the right to be fascinated by anything that doesn’t align with the traditional roles of a woman and that is to: cook, clean, submit to her husband, bear children, and look “pretty”.…
While this is a book about women’s reproductive rights, a recurring theme in the book is machismo: the idea of a strong, manly, alpha male. The ideals that lay beyond the term of machismo…
There is a culture of “women-only” that runs rampant in spaces for pregnant women. Much of the talk is about how valuable women find the support of other women. It also excludes men from the process and experience of pregnancy, as much as they can experience it. Overall the film focuses on the fact that women have been told they’re not responsible for their birth.…
But under primitive conditions, before the institutions of civilized society were created, the actual power of the mother over the infant must have been awesome. Only the mother over the infant from cold; only her breast milk could provide the nourishment needed for survival. Her indifference or neglect meant certain death. The life giving mother had power over life and death. No wonder that men and women, observing this dramatic and mysterious power of the female, turned to the veneration of Mother-Goddess. (Lerner, 40)…
In The Handmaid’s Tale, the issue of infertility prompts the establishment of Gilead, a totalitarian regime which abuses its power in…
I have chosen to analyze The Red Headed Baby by Langston Hughes and The Old Woman Magoun by Mary E. Wilkins. Both stories show very negative views on woman but in different ways. For this analysis I will take into account that racism may also be a factor in the mistreatment of woman in The Red Headed Baby, however remarks by the main character suggest sexist views as well. In The Red Headed Baby, the main character obviously holds that the woman in the story is not deserving of his respect. He repeatedly makes scathing remarks and holds onto the image he has of her from years earlier. . He treats her as though she was just a thing and has no meaning to him. I feel that as a result of hoe he feels about her, he disregards his own child and leaves…
From the minute babies are pushed out of a mother’s womb, or even an embryo in the third trimester, gender is a predominate factor in the way they are treated. Whether it’s with gifts (pink for a baby girl and blue for a baby boy,) or hypothesis about what this baby will grow up to be, oh this little one will be a nurse (referring to the delicate, nurturing three-day old female,) emphasis is greatly placed on the gender or sex of the child, creating cultural/gender norms and limitations. Gender rigidity is primarily produced in a child’s first years through advertising in toys or clothing, and forms limitations for gender roles later in life, such as jobs or behavioral mannerisms.…
The first few chapters are an introduction to Brave New World, which describes the process of embryos forming and transforming them into containers. In our society, babies can be created without intersexual course by using technologies and medicine. Couples who could not reproduce may try implantation methods to try to reproduce. Women do not have to choose to have sex to get pregnant. Sperm banks are widely used in the 21st century for women who does not wish to do it the old-fashion way. Drugs are used every day in America, either from over-the-counter or illegal…
To start off, the Feminist perspective is limited in explaining abortion because the “rights claims” (women rights) that feminists use to justify the act of abortion could be a satisfactory solution for inequality and injustice. The strategy of defending abortion of “the woman’s right to choose” comes under fire in two directions. First, the specific expression of the demand has enabled racist and historical policies concerned with population regulation, mainly concerning the US. “The major problem which has facilitated this form of appropriation lies with the meaning of the term ‘‘choice,’’ generally defined, both culturally and legally, as an aggregation of ideas of privacy and autonomy.” (Smith, 2002) The implicit meaning informing the…
Before a baby is even born, it’s gender and role in society is predetermined. Gender, a social construction, not only dictates what people “should” wear, but also how they “should” speak, and the jobs they “should” perform. For example, most societies expect men to be leaders, strong, dominant, honorable and ambitious. In contrast, women are viewed as nurturing, submissive, supportive, and sensitive. Essentially, gender serves as a primary basis for what is deemed acceptable. Furthermore, its use has more of a cognitive impact on an audience’s sense of understanding than what most would realize.…
Abstract: In this paper I will discuss the ethical issues surrounding surrogacy, egg donation, and discuss exploitations of women who choose to become a surrogate mother. In addition to these moral issues I will also explore the ethics and morals of IVF and the implantation of multiple eggs to one subject that may result in multiple births. In the occurrence of multiple births the subject is faced with the decision of selective abortion or the choice to give birth to all the fetuses with the risk of severe premature infants. With the birth of premature infants there are additional ethical decision involved in the treatment of those infants that may be afflicted with mental defects and a multitude of medical challenges.…
The story begins with “My last night of childhood began with a visit home” (Pearson 86), which foreshadows at the end of the story when the main character Gan finishes his childhood by accepting to put T’Gaoti’s eggs into his body. At the beginning of the story we can see how T’Gatoi is different from the human, and how important and authoritative she is in this society. “T’Gatoi was the Tlic government official in charge of the Preserve, and thus the most important of her kind to deal directly with Terrans.”…