For over 30 years, Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) has been used to meet the needs of married couples experiencing fertility problems in Thai society. The operation of ART compels us to consider the impact of technology on human nature and how it contributes to the construction of motherhood. The purpose of this article is to introduce a new analytical lens for examining the role of ART in the construction of the human body and motherhood from a post-humanistic perspective. The study used a qualitative methodology and drew samples from infertility patients and ART laboratory work. In-depth interviews, field notes, observations and photographs of tools/equipment were used to determine how the technology works in a laboratory setting within a clinic. The study demonstrated that ART is not only a technique for fixing physical defects in humans, but also a techno-space that shapes the human body to facilitate reproduction and motherhood construction. Spatiality, as performed by ART, denaturalizes and technicalizes the body. As a result, the ontological construction of motherhood takes on a spatial dimension and transcends human nature, resulting in what is referred to as techno-maternity.
CITATION STYLE
Suksom, P., & Sangkhamanee, J. (2022). Maternal techno-space: Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) and the ontological construction of motherhood in Thailand. Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences, 43(3), 539–546. https://doi.org/10.34044/j.kjss.2022.43.3.01
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