Why couple infertility is historically a female‐driven problem?

Author:

Vignozzi Linda1234ORCID,Cipriani Sarah1235,Lippi Donatella6

Affiliation:

1. Andrology, Women's Endocrinology and Gender Incongruence Unit Careggi University Hospital Florence Italy

2. Department of Experimental and Clinical Biomedical Sciences “Mario Serio” University of Florence Florence Italy

3. Center for the Prevention Diagnosis and Treatment of Infertility and Centro di ricerca/innovazione e coordinamento aziendale per la Salute e Medicina di genere (CISMEG) Careggi University Hospital Florence Italy

4. I.N.B.B. (Istituto Nazionale Biostrutture e Biosistemi) Rome Italy

5. Aware Fertility Unit AUSL Toscana Centro Florence Italy

6. Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine University of Florence Florence Italy

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe history of studies in the field of infertility represents a chapter of great interest in gender issues.ObjectivesThis paper aims to delve deep into the historical roots of the aspect of gender inequality related to couple infertility, with a journey back in time, from classical antiquity to the contemporary age, reporting junctions and metaphors linked to particular historical moments as well as to cultural and religious constructs.MethodsThis is a narrative review based on an extensive literature search of publications regarding the role of women in couple infertility over the centuries.ResultsRarely in the ancient world, male infertility was taken into consideration, and the sources deal with it mainly indirectly. This attitude of “blaming” the woman for the lack of children had, in fact, strong social implications, which only the scientific research of recent years has managed to bring back into the context of a more egalitarian approach.ConclusionsIn the “journey” narrated in this article, the reader starts from the responsibility of couple infertility attributed exclusively to women in some ancient societies, whose central role was determined by their ability to procreate, going up to the medicalization of infertility in the contemporary age, which contributed to sharing with men this participation in the impossibility of having children.

Publisher

Wiley

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