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Ambiguous encounters, uncertain foetuses: Women’s experiences of obstetric ultrasound

Version 2 2025-04-23, 00:31
Version 1 2023-05-18, 15:33
journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-23, 00:31 authored by N Stephenson, Kim McLeodKim McLeod, C Mills
We examine pregnant women’s experiences with routinised obstetric ultrasound as entailed in their antenatal care during planned pregnancies. This paper highlights the ambiguity of ultrasound technology in the constitution of maternal–foetal connections. Our analysis focusses on Australian women’s experiences of the ontological, aesthetic and epistemological ambiguities afforded by ultrasound. We argue that these ambiguities offer possibilities for connecting to the foetus in ways that maintain a kind of unknowability; they afford an openness and ethical responsiveness irrespective of the future of the foetus. This suggests that elucidating women’s experience has implications for theorising ethics across maternal–foetal relations and, more specifically, for the ‘moral pioneering’ (Rapp, 2000) that reproductive technologies can demand of women. Moral pioneering cannot be reduced to moments or processes of decision-making; it must allow for greater recognition of the affective commitments entailed in and incited by ultrasound. Furthermore, focussing on experiences of the ambiguity of ultrasound allows for understanding the ways in which affectivity circulates across domains commonly understood as medical or social, public or private. In doing so, it contributes to undermining a series of tensions that currently shape feminist analysis of obstetric ultrasound, often at the expense of the experience of women.

History

Publication title

Feminist Review

Volume

113

Issue

113

Pagination

17-33

ISSN

0141-7789

Department/School

School of Social Sciences

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan Ltd.

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Rights statement

Copyright 2016 Feminist Review

Socio-economic Objectives

280123 Expanding knowledge in human society

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being

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    University Of Tasmania

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