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About this book
In this ethnographic study of the new reproductive technologies in Israel, Susan Martha Kahn explores the cultural meanings and contemporary rabbinic responses to artificial insemination, in-vitro fertilization, egg donation, and surrogacy. Kahn draws on fieldwork with unmarried Israeli women who are using state-subsidized artificial insemination to get pregnant and on participant-observation in Israeli fertility clinics. Through close readings of traditional Jewish texts and careful analysis of Israeli public discourse, she explains how the Israeli embrace of new reproductive technologies has made Jewish beliefs about kinship startlingly literal. Kahn also reveals how a wide range of contemporary Israelis are using new reproductive technologies to realize their reproductive futures, from ultraorthodox infertile married couples to secular unmarried women.
As the first scholarly account of assisted conception in Israel, this multisited ethnography will contribute to current anthropological debates on kinship studies. It will also interest those involved with Jewish studies.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. ‘‘The time arrived but the father didn’t’’: A New Continuum of Israeli Conception
- 2. Not Mamzers: The Legislation of Reproduction and the ‘‘Issue’’ of Unmarried Women
- 3. Jewish and Gentile Sperm: Rabbinic Discourse on Sperm and Paternal Relatedness
- 4. Eggs and Wombs: The Origins of Jewishness
- 5. Multiple Mothers: Surrogacy and the Location of Maternity
- 6. Consequences for Kinship
- Conclusion: Reproducing Jews and Beyond
- Appendixes
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index