Etica & Politica/Ethics & Politics XX (3): 9–20.īaylis, Françoise. Guest editor’s introduction to “Genome Editing, Human Cloning, In Vitro Gametes and Artificial Womb: Towards Future Scenarios, New Dilemmas and Responsibilities”.
New York: Taylor & Francis.īalistreri, Maurizio. Body and Society 11 (3): 43–59.Īttebery, Brian. This chapter demonstrates how reproductive choices distinctly altered by biotechnology affect parent-child bonding and relationship, offer new family forms, and change the social status of parenting, and shows the importance of being a parent, a child, and a family in each generation to follow. Anne Charnock foretells the coming era of motherless births depicting the future of reproductive technologies and its myriad consequences for homo/heteroparents in Dreams Before the Start of Time (2018), which narrates how ectogenesis and parthenogenesis can coerce their productive choices of women across the generations because of social circumstances and public domains that regard the public presence of pregnancy as “a social anomaly.” Charnock’s novel is concerned with social inequality and questions of ableism, as the genetically engineered children potentially will create another class distinction between “GenRich”-genetically superior and “GenPoor” natural-born humans.