Institute for Study and Research of the Family, Scholl of Social Work, Haifa University, Haifa, Israel.
Head of Institute for Study and Research of the Family, Scholl of Social Work, Haifa University, Haifa, Israel.
J Homosex. 2023 Mar 21;70(4):707-728. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2021.1999118. Epub 2021 Nov 22.
This study explores the experiences of single gay men and gay men who raise children in couples who have created their families through surrogacy procedures in different countries and cultural contexts. The analysis of 39 in-depth, semi-structured interviews with these fathers suggests that the effects of medicalized reproduction on these men are twofold. Medicalized reproduction leads these men, on one hand, to feel alienated from surrogate pregnancy and the fetus, and on the other hand, to contribute to the construction of a new form of intimacy between the surrogates and the newborns. This highlights the paradoxical character of overseas surrogacy, which resonates with other forms of reproductive procedures. The importance of these findings is examined by means of a qualitative paradigm, through which we stress the complex impacts of medicalization on gestation, childbirth, and transition to parenthood among ART (i.e.: Assisted Reproduction Technologies) participants, in particular on gay men.
本研究探讨了在不同国家和文化背景下,通过代孕程序组建家庭的单身男同性恋者和男同性恋伴侣养育孩子的经历。对 39 名深度、半结构化访谈的分析表明,医学化生殖对这些父亲的影响是双重的。一方面,医学化生殖使这些男性对代孕和胎儿感到疏远,另一方面,又促成了代孕者和新生儿之间一种新形式的亲密关系。这凸显了海外代孕的矛盾性,与其他形式的生殖程序产生共鸣。通过定性范式来检验这些发现的重要性,我们强调了医学化对 ART(即辅助生殖技术)参与者妊娠、分娩和过渡到父母身份的复杂影响,特别是对男同性恋者的影响。