The Virtual Speculum in the New World Order1

Feminist Review 55 (1):22-72 (1997)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Beginning by reading a 1992 feminist appropriation of Michelangelo's Creation of Adam – in a cartoon in which the finger of a nude Adamic woman touches a computer keyboard, while the god-like VDT screen shows a disembodied fetus – ‘Virtual Speculum’ argues for a broader conception of ‘new reproductive technologies’ in order to foreground justice and freedom projects for differently situated women in the New World Order. Broadly conceptualized reproductive practices must be central to social theory in general, and to technoscience studies in particular. Tying together the politics of self help and women's health movements in the United States in the 1970s with positions on reproductive freedom articulated within the Legal Defense and Educational Fund of the NAACP in the 1990s, the paper examines recent work in feminist science studies in several disciplinary and activist locations. Statistical analysis and ethnography emerge as critical feminist technologies for producing convincing representations of the reproduction of inequality. Untangling the semiotic and political–economic dialectics of invisibility and hypervisibility, ‘Virtual Speculum’ concludes by linking the well-surveyed amniotic fluid of on-screen fetuses and the off-frame diarrhea of uncounted and underfed infants in regimes of flexible accumulation and structural adjustment.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 92,197

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

The Virtual.Rob Shields - 2002 - Routledge.
Feminist perspectives on human genetics and reproductive technologies.Donna Dickenson - 2016 - eLS (Formerly Known as the Encyclopedia of Life Sciences).
Virtual Aspects of the Fairy Tale.Alekseeva Olga Pavlovna - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 26:77-79.
The haunting affect of place in the discourse of the virtual.Rowan Wilken - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (1):49 – 63.
Świat wirtualny jako nowy przedmiot filozofii przyrody.Anna Latawiec - 2006 - Roczniki Filozoficzne 54 (2):119-131.
Virtual worlds and moral evaluation.Jeff Dunn - 2012 - Ethics and Information Technology 14 (4):255-265.
Subversion, sexuality and the virtual self.Jude Elund - 2015 - Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-11-24

Downloads
18 (#836,359)

6 months
11 (#243,798)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?