Abstract
AbstractHormones are complex biosocial objects that provoke myriad cultural narratives through their association with social activities and identities, and these narratives have the power to shape people’s lived realities and bodies. While hormones were historically conceptualised as ‘master molecules’ capable of controlling various life processes, their explanatory potential has now been overshadowed by technoscientific developments like omics- and gene-based biotechnologies that have reframed how human bodies and behaviours are understood. Considering these shifts, this paper asks what roles hormones perform and what stories they are arousing today. Through a patchwork of four hormone stories about contraception, gender hacking, birth, and autism-specific horse therapy, we show how hormones remain vital protagonists in the constitution of bodies, affects, environments, places, politics, and selves in the contemporary period. Building on new materialist approaches, we adopt and extend the notion of ‘emplotment’ to encapsulate how hormones act as key characters in our plots. They are working to complicate dominant understandings of what bodies are and can be in new ways as they mediate different plots of bodily experience, in ways showing the ongoing powerful salience of hormones and their ascendancy in the present.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference71 articles.
1. Ah-King, Malin, and Eva Hayward. 2013. Toxic sexes: Perverting pollution and queering hormone disruption. O-Zone: A Journal of Object-Oriented Studies 1: 1–12.
2. Akrich, Madeleine, Máire. Leane, Celia Roberts, and João Arriscado. Nunes. 2014. Practising childbirth activism: A politics of evidence. BioSocieties 9 (2): 129–152.
3. APA. 2013. Diagnostic and statistical manual of of mental disorders: DSM-5, 5th ed. Arlington: American Psychiatric Publishing.
4. Barad, Karen Michelle. 2007. Meeting the universe halfway: Quantum physics and the entanglement of matter and meaning. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
5. Bertotti, Andrea, Emily Mann, and Skye A. Miner. 2021. Efficacy as safety: Dominant cultural assumptions and the assessment of contraceptive risk. Social Science & Medicine 270: 113547.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献