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E-grāmata: Reproducing Fictional Ethnographies: Surrogacy and Digitally Performed Anthropological Knowledge

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This book focuses on the example of surrogate motherhood to explore the interplay between new reproductive technologies and new ethnographic writing technologies. It seeks to interrogate the potential of fictional multimodality in ethnography and to illuminate the generative possibilities of digital artefacts in anthropological research. It also makes a case for the tailor-made character of ethnographic writing in the digital era, arguing that research quests and representational modalities can be paired together to develop unique narrative forms, corresponding to each particular topics traits and analytical affordances.





Focusing on the intersections of assisted reproduction technologies and digitally mediated writing, this study casts light upon the value of the affective, the fictional and the real in the anthropological research and writing of relatedness. Analyzing the situated knowledge of ethnographers and research interlocutors, it experiments with multimodalstorytelling and revisits the century-long debate on the affinity between an object of study and the possibilities for its representation. As the first attempt to bring together digital anthropology, fiction writing and the ethnography of surrogacy, this book fuses the genealogy of feminist critique on the orthodox, phallocentric, and heteronormative aspects of academic discourse with the input of digital humanities vis-ą-vis troubling the conventional formal properties of scholarly writing.
1 Surrogate Bodies and Digital Critique
1(68)
Introducing The Birth of a Topic
1(6)
Why Surrogacy? Why Now?
7(4)
Methodology in a Nutshell
11(2)
Crafting a Digital Artifact
13(5)
Surrogacy as a Liminal Practice
18(4)
Reality and Its Discontents
22(4)
Why a Digital Artifact About Surrogacy?
26(31)
References
57(12)
2 The Literary and the Ethnographic: Fictionalizing Surrogacy
69(46)
Fictions and Anthropologies
69(5)
Affective Entanglements, Mediation, and Joint Work
74(7)
Graphic in the Ethnographic
81(10)
Imagining Relatedness and Achieving Personhood
91(10)
Medicalizatiou
101(3)
Autoethnography, Duoethnography, Reflexivity
104(4)
References
108(7)
3 Assisted Reproduction as Poetry and Metaphor
115(38)
Metaphors of Persons and Meaning: Forging a Parallel Between Reproduction and Poetry
115(6)
Metaphor, Poetry, and Truth
121(10)
Reproduction and as a Media/ted Practice
131(4)
Relatedness and Storytelling: Remix and Creativity
135(5)
The Body as Anthropological and as Feminist Writing Trope
140(6)
References
146(7)
4 When Fictional Ethnography Goes Digital
153(40)
Digital Anthropology's Coming of Age
153(4)
Hyper-texts and Writing Surfaces
157(5)
Sensory Engagement and Gender in Digital Narration
162(3)
Performativity, Intersectionality, and Transmedia Storytelling
165(14)
Collaborative Trajectories and the Design of Anthropological Futures
179(5)
References
184(9)
5 Epilogue: Un-Disciplining Anthropology
193(4)
Index 197
Anna Apostolidou holds a PhD in social anthropology (University College London) and a PhD in digital education (Hellenic Open University). She has taught, conducted research and published extensively on gender and sexuality, digital learning, refugee education, surrogate motherhood and fictional digital writing.