ABSTRACT

Critical Interventions in the Ethics of Healthcare argues that traditional modes of bioethics are proving incommensurable with burgeoning biotechnologies and consequently, emerging subjectivities. Drawn from diverse disciplines, this volume works toward a new mode of discourse in bioethics, offering a critique of the current norms and constraints under which Western healthcare operates. The contributions imagine new, less paternalistic, terms by which bioethics might proceed - terms that do not resort to exclusively Western models of liberal humanism or to the logic of neoliberal economies. It is argued that in this way, we can begin to develop an ethical vocabulary that does justice to the challenges of our age. Bringing together theorists, practitioners and clinicians to present a wide variety of related disciplinary concerns and perspectives on bioethics, this volume challenges the underlying assumptions that continue to hold sway in the ethics of medicine and health sciences.

part I|45 pages

Clinical Interventions

chapter 2|12 pages

“You Might Not Feel Like Yourself”

On Heart Transplants, Identity, and Ethics

chapter 3|14 pages

Embracing the Intersubjective

An Ethics of Care for Chronic Illness

part II|71 pages

Biopolitical Interventions

chapter 4|20 pages

Biotechnology and the Governance of Life

The Case of Pre-implantation Genetic Diagnosis

chapter 5|16 pages

“Hail the Cure!”

Althusser, Biotechnology, and Biopolitics

chapter 6|18 pages

The Perils of Scientific Obedience

Bioethics under the Spectre of Biofascism

chapter 7|16 pages

Contesting the Autistic Subject

Biological Citizenship and the Autism/Autistic Movement

part III|49 pages

Gendered Interventions

chapter 8|14 pages

The View from Inside

Gendered Embodiment and the Medical Representation of Sex

chapter 9|16 pages

The Politics of Medico-Legal Recognition

The Terms of Gendered Subjectivity in the UK Gender Recognition Act

part IV|53 pages

Cultural Interventions

chapter 11|16 pages

The Code of Ethics in Medicine

Intertextuality and Meaning in Plato's Sophist and Hippocrates' Oath

chapter 12|16 pages

Sleeping Ethics

Gene, Episteme, and the Body Politic

chapter 13|20 pages

The Last Temptation of Marion Woodman

The Anorexic Remainder in Bone: Dying Into Life