University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal.
J Bioeth Inq. 2022 Sep;19(3):381-394. doi: 10.1007/s11673-022-10184-w. Epub 2022 Apr 11.
The purpose of this article is to reflect on the changes that the implementation of artificial wombs would bring to society, the family, and the concept of motherhood and fatherhood through the lens of two recent books: Helen Sedgwick's The Growing Season and Rebecca Ann Smith's Baby X. Each of the two novels, set in a near future, follows the work of a scientist who develops artificial womb technology. Significantly, both women experience concerns about the technology and its long-term effects that make both of them leave their laboratories and rethink the technology they invented, while considering its many ethical implications. Both novels can be seen as feminist revisionary rewritings of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, rejecting the vision of rows of mass-produced, anonymous babies in artificial wombs, stressing instead the closeness of the parents to their offspring. They nevertheless critically evaluate not only the many potential benefits for women of ectogenetic technology but also the possible disadvantages and pitfalls.
本文旨在通过海伦·塞奇威克的《成长季》和丽贝卡·安·史密斯的《宝贝 X》这两本近期出版的书籍,从人工子宫的实施将给社会、家庭以及母性和父性观念带来的变化的角度进行反思。这两部小说都设定在不久的将来,讲述了两位科学家开发人工子宫技术的工作。值得注意的是,两位女性都对这项技术及其长期影响表示担忧,这使她们都离开了实验室,重新思考自己发明的技术,并考虑其众多伦理影响。这两部小说都可以被视为对奥尔德斯·赫胥黎的《美丽新世界》的女性主义修正重写,它们拒绝接受一排排在人工子宫中批量生产的匿名婴儿的愿景,而是强调父母与子女的亲近。然而,它们不仅批判性地评价了胚胎外技术可能给女性带来的诸多潜在好处,还评价了可能存在的劣势和陷阱。