“Mix or Match?”: Transnational Fertility Industry and White Desirability
Amrita Pande
Abstract
Does the transnational process of gamete selection challenge ways of mobilizing race and whiteness? Based on a mobile ethnography of the transnational fertility industry, I argue that fertility experts and intended parents (IP) co-produce the desirability of whiteness through "racial matching" for white, heterosexual IP, and "strategic hybridization", or strategic mixing of gametes, for some same-sex IP who do not identify as white. Although disruptive of notions of racial purity of whiteness and the heteronormative focus on resemblance match, the transnational legitimizing of such desires as intimate and innocuous choices depoliticizes conversations around race, racialization and whiteness as privilege.
Topics & Concepts
RacializationPrivilege (computing)Race (biology)FertilityEthnographyWhite (mutation)SociologyGender studiesPolitical sciencePopulationLawBiologyDemographyGeneAnthropologyBiochemistryReproductive Health and TechnologiesDemographic Trends and Gender PreferencesLGBTQ Health, Identity, and Policy