1st Edition

Pregnancy, Risk and Biopolitics On the Threshold of the Living Subject

By Lorna Weir Copyright 2007
256 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Traditionally, Euroamerican cultures have considered that human status was conferred at the conclusion to childbirth. However, in contemporary Euroamerican biomedicine, law and politics, the living subject is often claimed to pre-exist birth. In this fascinating book Lorna Weir argues that the displacement of birth as the threshold of the living subject began in the 1950s with the novel concept... Read more

1. On the Threshold of the Living Subject  2. A Genealogy of Perinatal Mortality  3. Health beyond Risk: A Midwifery Ethos in Prenatal Care  4. Legal Fiction and Reality Effects: Evidence of Perinatal Risk  5. Child Welfare at the Perinatal Threshold: Making Orders Protecting Fetuses  6. Biopolitics at the Threshold of the Living Subject  7. Bibliography

Biography

Lorna Weir is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at the York Centre for Health Studies at York University, Ontario, Canada, and is a member of Health Care, Technology and Place, Canadian Institutes for  Health Research (University of Toronto). 

"Lorna Weir’s Pregnancy, Risk and Biopolitics: On the Threshold of the Living Subject is an empirically rich and theoretically sophisticated analysis of pregnancy discourse."

-- Canadian Journal of Sociology, Vol. 34, No. 1, 2009