Mandy Merck

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Mandy Merck



Average rating: 3.6 · 191 ratings · 15 reviews · 19 distinct works
The Sexual Subject: A Scree...

4.09 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 1992 — 9 editions
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After Diana: Irreverent Ele...

3.19 avg rating — 16 ratings — published 1998 — 3 editions
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Further Adventures of The D...

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3.75 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2010 — 9 editions
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Perversions: Deviant Readings

2.71 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1993 — 11 editions
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The British monarchy on screen

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Coming Out of Feminism?

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3.67 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 1899 — 2 editions
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In Your Face: 9 Sexual Stud...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2000 — 5 editions
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Hollywood's American Traged...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2007 — 6 editions
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Hollywood's American Traged...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2007
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America First: Naming the N...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2006 — 8 editions
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“The critique of the male medical establishment and in particular the medicalization of childbirth were already becoming prominent concerns within the emerging women’s health movement, and engendering its related critiques of biological determinism, sexism in science, and patriarchal epistemology. At the same time, the issue of population control dominated the global planning agenda, as well as the family planning one. The intertwined debates about abortion, contraception, planned parenthood, and population growth all concerned access to technology, improvements in basic research on reproduction, and technological innovation, and espoused a linear technological trajectory of increased biological control in which birth control = population control = evolutionary control.”
Mandy Merck, Further Adventures of The Dialectic of Sex: Critical Essays on Shulamith Firestone

“In Firestone’s dialectic of tech (or specifically reprotech), it is the revolutionary capacity of technological progress that establishes the crucial link between feminism, population control, and ecological sustainability. Greater technological control over both production and reproduction is thus the ultimate ethical and political imperative that links the future of the female to the future of the human race, as the rate of population growth eventually becomes a matter of human survival, against which biology can no longer be protected as a “moral” question. “Thus,” she argued,
in view of accelerating technology, a revolutionary ecological movement would have the same aim as the feminist movement: control of the new technology for humane purposes, the establishment of a new equilibrium between man and the new artificial environment he is creating, to replace the destroyed “natural” balance.”
Mandy Merck, Further Adventures of The Dialectic of Sex: Critical Essays on Shulamith Firestone

“In the same way that Firestone’s embrace of scientific and technological progress as manifest destiny tips its hat to Marx and Engels, so also it resembles (perhaps even more closely) the Marxist-inspired biofuturism of the interwar period, particularly in Britain, in the work of writers such as H. G. Wells, J. B. S. Haldane, J. D. Bernal, Julian Huxley, Conrad Waddington, and their contemporaries (including Gregory Bateson and Joseph Needham, the latter of whose embryological interests led to his enduring fascination with the history of technology in China). Interestingly, it is also in these early twentieth century writings that ideas about artificial reproduction, cybernation, space travel, genetic modification, and ectogenesis abound. As cultural theorist Susan Squier has demonstrated, debates about ectogenesis were crucial to both the scientific ambitions and futuristic narratives of many of the United Kingdom’s most eminent biologists from the 1920s and the 1930s onward. As John Burdon Sanderson (“Jack”) Haldane speculated in his famous 1923 paper “Daedalus, or Science and the Future” (originally read to the Heretics society in Cambridge) ectogenesis could provide a more efficient and rational basis for human reproduction in the future:
[W]e can take an ovary from a woman, and keep it growing in a suitable fluid for as long as twenty years, producing a fresh ovum each month, of which 90 per cent can be fertilized, and the embryos grown successfully for nine months, and then brought out into the air.”
Mandy Merck, Further Adventures of The Dialectic of Sex: Critical Essays on Shulamith Firestone



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