Is pregnancy barbaric?
Thread at Feministe, on comments by radical feminist Shulamith Firestone in 1970. Comments spend a fair amount of time discussing Bujold, which warms my heart. One poster wonders if one's gut reaction toward uterine replicators (Bujold) or exowombs (Transhuman Space) is governed by prior exposure to Brave New World vs. Bujold.
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It reminds me of the anti-breastfeeding rhetoric though in terms of being "unfair" to women, "gross" and "animalistic" (which I find odd, because of course, we are animals).
Lots of women find it empowering to let their bodies do what they are supposed to do, and to do things that men can't do with them. And of course its the one time in a woman's life where her body is about _her_ (and her child) and she has some freedom from conformity to standard beauty images.
I don't know how popular an exowomb would be, but having fun imagining some of the repercussions. Right now there is a small but strong movement towards more natural childbirth and child rearing practices - less doctors, more midwives, more homebirths - and in some cases for the really harcore: unassisted childbirth with no help at all. I lean more in that direction myself, but then I'm someone who loved being pregnant and had a fairly easy time with it.
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As for singling out pregnancy, I infer that Firestone had a thesis of how pregnancy was a keystone of the social subjugation of women. Everyone shits, only women spend nine months dueling their fetus for control of their bone calcium, so you've got both specialization and intensity, vs. something everyone does which isn't that big a deal.
As apparently a radical rather than liberal feminist, she apparently had extreme positions of "pregnancy is treachery", while the pro-exowomb commenters said "of course no one should be forced to use one".
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This is mature biotech territory, but yeah...
(One of my problems with the Bujold books is how anyone with access to full medicine manages to die. They're demonstrated as being capable of replacing or growing any individual body part, as well as risky brain transplants to full clone bodies.)
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