1st Edition

Anthropology of Reproduction: The Basics

By Sallie Han, Cecília Tomori Copyright 2025
200 Pages
by Routledge

200 Pages
by Routledge

200 Pages
by Routledge

Anthropology of Reproduction: The Basics is a clear and accessible guide to topics in reproduction from the perspective of anthropology, emphasizing the central importance of reproduction in human sociocultural and biological experience. It examines why reproduction matters so much to human beings and what anthropology offers to better understand their decisions about having or not having... Read more

1 Why reproduction matters and what the anthropology of reproduction offers

Four-field anthropology and the study of reproduction

How does the anthropology of reproduction help us understand reproduction?

Key axes of oppression: Colonialism and race, sex, and gender inequalities

Reproductive justice

Reproduction as reckoning

Overview of this book

Summary

Further Exploring

·       Readings in the anthropology of reproduction

·       Resources on reproductive justice

References

2 Menstruation, contraception, and abortion

Menstruation

·       The meanings of menstruation

·       The endometrial cycle

·       Period products

·       Regulating menstruation

·       Menopause

Contraception

·       Gendered division of birth control

·       Sterilization and long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs)

Abortion

Summary

Further Exploring

·       Menstruation

·       Contraception

·       Abortion

References

3 Infertility, assisted reproductive technologies, and reproductive losses

Infertility, unwanted childlessness, and the “quest for conception”

·       Seeking solutions for childlessness

·       The infertility treatment journey

Assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs)

·       Alleviating the gendered burden of infertility

·       Marriage, kinship, and religion

·       Troubling kinship relations

·       Surrogacy, kinship, race/ethnicity and the nation

·       ARTs and ideologies of race and nation

·       The political economy of ARTs

·       ARTs as a reproductive justice issue

Reproductive losses

·       Pregnancy loss and its meanings

·       Experiencing loss

·       Losing a pregnancy

·       Repeat losses

·       Reproductive loss and reproductive justice

Summary

Further Exploring

References

4 Pregnancy and birth

Pregnancy

·       The paradoxes of pregnancy

·       Pregnancy as an occasion for ritual

·       Prenatal biomedical care and diagnostic testing

·       Imperfect woman, perfectible pregnancy

Birth

·       Birth, culture, and social support

·       Who assists or attends to birthing people: Kinship, care and biomedicalization

·       Racism, colonialism, and biomedicine in birth

·       Where births take place: Sites of safety or violence

Summary

Further Exploring

·       Pregnancy

·       Birth

References

5 Postpartum, infant, and other care

The postpartum period – care, community and kinship

Evolutionary roots

What happened to the postpartum period and infant care?

The transformation of breastfeeding to infant feeding – and back again?

Infant sleep and breastsleeping

“Transgressive” breastfeeding and milk sharing

Breastfeeding and infectious disease

Breastfeeding and emergencies

Collective models of care

Reproductive justice and the return to community postpartum and infant care

Summary

Further Exploring

·       Breastfeeding and lactation

·       Infant sleep

·       Alloparents

References

6 Struggles and movements toward reproductive justice

Population and fertility crises in context

·       From anti-natalism to pronatalism in South Korea

·       Anti-natalism, anti-immigration, and pro-nationalism

Reproduction in times and places of armed conflict and war

·       Pregnancy, birth, and breastfeeding in Gaza, 2023-2024

·       Female combatants, sexual violence, and the removal of children in Ukraine, 2022-2024

Continuing fights for reproductive rights, freedom and justice

·       Fighting for access to birth control and abortion

·       The struggle for LGBTQ+ recognition

·       Struggles against racism in sexuality, birth and infant care

Conceiving our future

Summary

Further Exploring

References

Glossary

Index

Biography

Sallie Han is Professor of Anthropology at SUNY Oneonta, USA. She is the author of Pregnancy in Practice: Expectation and Experience in the Contemporary US (2013), co-editor of The Anthropology of the Fetus: Biology, Culture, and Society (2018) and The Routledge Handbook of Anthropology and Reproduction (2022). Cecília Tomori is Associate Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins University, USA. She is the author of Nighttime Breastfeeding: An American Cultural Dilemma (2014), co-editor of Breastfeeding: New Anthropological Approaches (2018) and The Routledge Handbook of Anthropology and Reproduction (2022), and numerous other publications.

“The approach is fresh, the writing accessible and engaging. The authors have deep knowledge of the subject and convey it with clarity and enthusiasm […] Han and Tomori are far and away the best scholars for the job.” – Carole H. Browner, Co-editor of Reproduction, Globalization, and the State (Duke 2012), UCLA

“Care is taken to situate human reproduction holistically; this is useful not only for students with a background in anthropology – it gives students in other disciplines a different and more complete picture of human reproduction.” – Keri Canada, Colorado State University

“Anthropology's holistic approach makes it an ideal discipline for studying reproduction. This text utilizes that comprehensive perspective, emphasizing the importance of understanding diverse contexts—political, economic, historical, and racial—to educate readers on social inequalities.” – Angela Castañeda, DePauw University