Abstract
Significant developments in medical research and technology have meant that the
process of reproduction is increasingly affected by the consumption of a variety of
services and goods. Individuals intervene in their own reproductive processes as
they eat particular foods, take particular drugs and avail themselves of diagnostic
and reproductive services. Although such developments have been analysed by
feminists in terms of their ethical consequences or their contribution to the
commodification of reproduction, they have not been evaluated in terms of their
contribution to reproductive consumption. This article argues that we can avoid the
reductiveness of critiques of commodified reproduction by developing a conceptual
framework of reproductive consumption. Thinking through reproductive consumption
also enables feminist analysis to expand our understanding of the gendered aspects
of consumption. Most feminist work on consumption practices has focused on the
domestic sphere as a site of consumption or on the role of sex and sexuality in
promoting consumption. This article's analysis of reproductive consumption
adds to this work by revealing ways in which biological reproduction itself is a
site of consuming desires and needs, and is permeated by socio-economic forces. In
developing a theoretical framework for analysing reproductive consumption, this
article argues that consumption produces
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