Stitching Stories of Broken Hearts: Living Response-ably with the Technologies of Death and Dying at the Beginning of Life

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Born with half a heart, my firstborn child died when he was three weeks old. This auto-ethnographic article takes as its point of departure one of the questions that this tragic event made me ask: How do technologies reconfigure responsibility for death, as technologies are involved in ending or saving the lives of children like my son? With this question, I introduce a new research agenda within reproductive studies regarding how technologies remake death and dying at the beginning of life. Drawing on the notion of phenomena from agential realism, I examine how responsibility emerges in different ways as I tell my son’s story together with media and medical stories told about foetuses or infants who died after having been diagnosed with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. I show that we need to challenge the idea of the autonomous subject that shapes the Cartesian understanding of ethics and responsibility. By stitching stories of broken hearts together, my storytelling is not only a call for a feminist ethics of living response-ably with technologies of death and dying at the beginning of life, it is a way to find response-able practices of living with the deaths of foetuses and infants.
Original languageEnglish
JournalAustralian Feminist Studies
Volume35
Issue number104
Pages (from-to)155-169
Number of pages15
ISSN0816-4649
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Jul 2020

Keywords

  • ethnography of emergent phenomena
  • feminist ethics
  • infant death
  • reproductive technologies
  • response-ability
  • Technologies of death

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Stitching Stories of Broken Hearts: Living Response-ably with the Technologies of Death and Dying at the Beginning of Life'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this