Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank: Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing

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Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank : Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing. / Bach, Anna Sofie; Kroløkke, Charlotte.

In: Science as Culture, 02.07.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bach, AS & Kroløkke, C 2020, 'Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank: Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing', Science as Culture. https://doi.org/10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953

APA

Bach, A. S., & Kroløkke, C. (2020). Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank: Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing. Science as Culture. https://doi.org/10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953

Vancouver

Bach AS, Kroløkke C. Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank: Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing. Science as Culture. 2020 Jul 2. https://doi.org/10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953

Author

Bach, Anna Sofie ; Kroløkke, Charlotte. / Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank : Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing. In: Science as Culture. 2020.

Bibtex

@article{786a43a8d267484893236177b0880b6d,
title = "Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank: Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing",
abstract = "In Denmark, female patients who undergo chemo- and radiation therapy are, prior to treatment, increasingly offered fertility preservation in the form of ovarian tissue freezing. In the cryotank, the frozen ovarian tissue awaits the recovery of the patient, after which it can be thawed and implanted into the remaining ovary or the abdominal wall. Here it potentially restores the ovarian function and enables women to become pregnant and experience genetic motherhood. Promising reproductive futures, the biomedical imaginary of ovarian tissue preservation is entangled with visions of possibilities and risk management as well as gendered understandings of reproduction and the {\textquoteleft}good life.{\textquoteright} From the get-go, ovarian tissue freezing has been informed by an optimistic imaginary of scientific progress. Not only were freezing programs established before clinical evidence testified to the success of the technique in humans; the envisioning of improvements and new applications also anticipates future scientific breakthroughs, such as in vitro maturation of eggs. In the imaginary of hopefulness and reproductive futurity, frozen ovarian tissue becomes an object of vitality which (re)installs the cancer patient as a reproductive citizen. Moreover, ovarian tissue is imagined as a bountiful material with different potentiality than egg freezing. In Denmark, the biomedical imaginary romanticizes the restoration of {\textquoteleft}natural{\textquoteright} fertility and spontaneous pregnancies. Thus, the potentiality of ovarian tissue freezing is imagined within a normative framework privileging {\textquoteleft}natural{\textquoteright} conception, yet simultaneously destabilizing the very notion of the age-span of {\textquoteleft}natural fertility.{\textquoteright}",
author = "Bach, {Anna Sofie} and Charlotte Krol{\o}kke",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953",
language = "English",
journal = "Science as Culture",
issn = "0950-5431",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hope and Happy Futurity in the Cryotank

T2 - Biomedical Imaginaries of Ovarian Tissue Freezing

AU - Bach, Anna Sofie

AU - Kroløkke, Charlotte

PY - 2020/7/2

Y1 - 2020/7/2

N2 - In Denmark, female patients who undergo chemo- and radiation therapy are, prior to treatment, increasingly offered fertility preservation in the form of ovarian tissue freezing. In the cryotank, the frozen ovarian tissue awaits the recovery of the patient, after which it can be thawed and implanted into the remaining ovary or the abdominal wall. Here it potentially restores the ovarian function and enables women to become pregnant and experience genetic motherhood. Promising reproductive futures, the biomedical imaginary of ovarian tissue preservation is entangled with visions of possibilities and risk management as well as gendered understandings of reproduction and the ‘good life.’ From the get-go, ovarian tissue freezing has been informed by an optimistic imaginary of scientific progress. Not only were freezing programs established before clinical evidence testified to the success of the technique in humans; the envisioning of improvements and new applications also anticipates future scientific breakthroughs, such as in vitro maturation of eggs. In the imaginary of hopefulness and reproductive futurity, frozen ovarian tissue becomes an object of vitality which (re)installs the cancer patient as a reproductive citizen. Moreover, ovarian tissue is imagined as a bountiful material with different potentiality than egg freezing. In Denmark, the biomedical imaginary romanticizes the restoration of ‘natural’ fertility and spontaneous pregnancies. Thus, the potentiality of ovarian tissue freezing is imagined within a normative framework privileging ‘natural’ conception, yet simultaneously destabilizing the very notion of the age-span of ‘natural fertility.’

AB - In Denmark, female patients who undergo chemo- and radiation therapy are, prior to treatment, increasingly offered fertility preservation in the form of ovarian tissue freezing. In the cryotank, the frozen ovarian tissue awaits the recovery of the patient, after which it can be thawed and implanted into the remaining ovary or the abdominal wall. Here it potentially restores the ovarian function and enables women to become pregnant and experience genetic motherhood. Promising reproductive futures, the biomedical imaginary of ovarian tissue preservation is entangled with visions of possibilities and risk management as well as gendered understandings of reproduction and the ‘good life.’ From the get-go, ovarian tissue freezing has been informed by an optimistic imaginary of scientific progress. Not only were freezing programs established before clinical evidence testified to the success of the technique in humans; the envisioning of improvements and new applications also anticipates future scientific breakthroughs, such as in vitro maturation of eggs. In the imaginary of hopefulness and reproductive futurity, frozen ovarian tissue becomes an object of vitality which (re)installs the cancer patient as a reproductive citizen. Moreover, ovarian tissue is imagined as a bountiful material with different potentiality than egg freezing. In Denmark, the biomedical imaginary romanticizes the restoration of ‘natural’ fertility and spontaneous pregnancies. Thus, the potentiality of ovarian tissue freezing is imagined within a normative framework privileging ‘natural’ conception, yet simultaneously destabilizing the very notion of the age-span of ‘natural fertility.’

UR - https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/en/publications/8c8c4e55-061e-4511-bfc1-02c79e31b2d4

U2 - 10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953

DO - 10.1080/09505431.2019.1681953

M3 - Journal article

JO - Science as Culture

JF - Science as Culture

SN - 0950-5431

ER -

ID: 289159496