{"id":1786,"date":"2017-12-08T15:06:08","date_gmt":"2017-12-08T21:06:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/?page_id=1786"},"modified":"2025-10-19T19:23:12","modified_gmt":"2025-10-20T00:23:12","slug":"biotechnology-culture-and-the-body","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/biotechnology-culture-and-the-body\/","title":{"rendered":"Biotechnology, Culture, and the Body"},"content":{"rendered":"
with Eric Avery, Paul Brodwin, Lisa Cartwright, Sarah Davies Cordova, Thomas Csordas, Richard Doyle, Michael M. J. Fischer, Jane Gallop, Pamela Gilbert, Marshall Goodman, Gillian Goslinga, Deborah Grayson, Donald Joralemon, Hannah Landecker, Thomas Laqueuer, Sandra Soo Jin Lee, Helen Longino, Mary Mahowald, Patricia Marshall, Ellen McCallum, Robert M. Nelson, Panivong Norindr, Jane Petro, Lily Pink, Karen Riggs, Caroline Seymour-Jorn, Susan Squier, Janelle Taylor, Jos\u00e9 Van Dijck, William Van Pelt, Angela Wall, Alice Wexler, and Kathleen Woodward<\/em><\/p>\n The conference Biotechnology, Culture, and the Body was held April 24 – 26, 1997 in Curtin Hall 175 on the first two days and at the 51ÁÔÆæ Hefter Center on April 26. The conference examined the social and cultural ramifications of reproductive technologies and end-of-life technologies. Scholars from anthropology, cultural and literary studies, history, film, bioethics, and medicine addressed how new and emerging medical technologies were recasting the central debates in society about the authority of scientific medicine, the personal and political control of the body, and the appropriate relationships between technology, natural processes, and social life. Many of the papers presented at the conference were later developed in the book Biotechnology and Culture: Bodies, Anxieties, Ethics<\/em> (2000), edited by Paul Brodwin.<\/p>\n April 24, 1997<\/strong><\/p>\n Reception and Screening of Gillian Goslinga<\/strong>‘s Welcome and Introduction<\/em> Reproductive Technologies (I)<\/em> Deborah Grayson<\/strong> (Rochester) Alice Wexler<\/strong> (UCLA) April 25, 1997<\/strong><\/p>\n Reproductive Technologies (II)<\/em><\/p>\n Robert M. Nelson<\/strong> (Medical College of Wisconsin) Angela Wall<\/strong> (Georgia Institute of Technology) End-of-Life Technologies<\/em><\/p>\n Donald Joralemon<\/strong> (Smith) Hannah Landecker<\/strong> (MIT) April 26, 1997<\/strong><\/p>\n Images of the Body, Maps of Identity<\/em><\/p>\n Lisa Cartwright<\/strong> (Rochester) Jos\u00e9 Van Dijck<\/strong> (Limburg, The Netherlands) The Globalization of Medical Technologies: Colonialism and Transnational Culture<\/em><\/p>\n Patricia Marshall<\/strong> (Loyola) Biotechnology and the Disciplines: Anthropology, Feminist Theory, and Science<\/em><\/p>\n Michael M. J. Fischer<\/strong> (MIT)
<\/a>April 24 – 26, 1997<\/p>\n
<\/a>
<\/a>
\nThe Child the Stork Brought Home<\/em> (1997)<\/p>\n
\nMarshall Goodman<\/strong>
\nDean, College of Letters and Science, 51ÁÔÆæ
\nKathleen Woodward<\/strong>
\nCenter Director<\/p>\n
<\/a>
\nThomas Laquerur<\/strong> (UC-Berkeley)
\n“From Generation to Generation: Connections in the Age of Reproductive Technology”
\nSusan Squier<\/strong> (Penn State)
\n“Life and Death at Strangeways: The Tissue Culture Point of View”
\nChair: Paul Brodwin (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
<\/a>
\n“Mediating Intimacy: Black Surrogate Mothers and the Law”
\nMary Mahowald<\/strong> (Chicago)
\n“Genetics and Women’s Bodies”
\nChair: Jane Gallop (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\n“Choreographing Fate: The Dancing Body of Huntington’s Disease”
\nIntroduction: Kathleen Woodward<\/strong> (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\n“The Ventilator\/Baby as Cyborg: A Case Study in Technology and Medical Ethics”
\nJanelle Taylor<\/strong> (Chicago)
\n“An All-Consuming Experience: Obstetrical Ultrasound and the Commodification of Pregnancy”
\nChair: Karen Riggs (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\n“Mothers, Monsters, and Family Values: Protocols of Pregnancy and Older Women”
\nGillian Goslinga<\/strong> (UC-Santa Cruz)
\n“Body Boundaries: Fiction of the Female Self”
\nChair: Pamela Gilbert (UW-Parkside)<\/p>\n
\n“Organ Procurement and the Free Marketers”
\nRichard Doyle<\/strong> (Penn State)
\n“On Beyond Living: Cryonics, Comas, and Other Post-Vital Bodies”
\nChair: Sarah Davies Cordova (Marquette)<\/p>\n
\n“Seeking Cellvation (TM): Tissue Culture, HeLa Cells, and Immortality”
\nEric Avery<\/strong> (Texas Medical Branch, Galveston)
\n“Boundary Crossing: Medicine, Art, and Liminal Spaces”
\nChair: Ellen McCallum (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
<\/a>
\n“The Public Lives of Digital Cadavers: A Cultural Anatomy of the
\nNational Library of Medicine’s Visible Human Project”
\nThomas Csordas<\/strong> (Case Western Reserve)
\n“Computerized Cadavers: A Slice of Life in Virtual Reality”
\nChair: William Van Pelt (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\n“Images of Biophoria: The Human Genome Metaphors”
\nChair: Sandra Soo Jin Lee (Rockefeller Fellow, 51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\n“Kidney Transplantation in India: Negotiating a Moral Economy of Suffering”
\nPanivong Norindr<\/strong> (51ÁÔÆæ)
\n“The Art of French Topical Medicine”
\nPaul Brodwin<\/strong> (51ÁÔÆæ)
\n“The Rhetoric of Medical Power in the Haitian Diaspora”
\nChair: Caroline Seymour-Jorn (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
\nHelen Longino<\/strong> (Minnesota)
\nChair: Paul Brodwin (51ÁÔÆæ)<\/p>\n
<\/a>