Infertile Environments: Epigenetic Toxicology and the Reproductive Health of Chinese Men

Infertile Environments: Epigenetic Toxicology and the Reproductive Health of Chinese Men

by Janelle Lamoreaux
Infertile Environments: Epigenetic Toxicology and the Reproductive Health of Chinese Men

Infertile Environments: Epigenetic Toxicology and the Reproductive Health of Chinese Men

by Janelle Lamoreaux

Hardcover

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Overview

In Infertile Environments, Janelle Lamoreaux investigates how epigenetic research into the effects of toxic exposure conceptualizes and configures environments. Drawing on fieldwork in a Nanjing, China, toxicology lab that studies the influence of pesticides and other pollutants on male reproductive and developmental health, Lamoreaux shows how the lab’s everyday research practices bring national, hormonal, dietary, maternal, and laboratory environments into being. She situates the lab’s work within broader Chinese history as well as the contemporary cultural and political moment, in which declining fertility rates and reproductive governance and technology are growing concerns. She also points to how toxicology in China is a transnational endeavor tied to both local conditions and international research agendas and infrastructures, which highlights the myriad scales and scope of epigenetic environments. At a moment of growing concerns about toxins, endocrine-disrupting chemicals, and climate change, Lamoreaux demonstrates that epigenetic research’s proliferation of environments produces new kinds of toxic relations that impact multiple generations of humans.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478016700
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 01/03/2023
Series: Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography
Pages: 154
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

Janelle Lamoreaux is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Arizona and coeditor of the Routledge Handbook of Genomics, Health, and Society.

Table of Contents

Preface  ix
Acknowledgments  xv
Introduction  1
1. The National Environment  21
2. The Hormonal Environment  35
3. The Dietary Environment  52
4. The Maternal Environment  64
5. The Laboratory Environment  77
Coda  92
Epilogue  97
Notes  103
References  109
Index  129

What People are Saying About This

Good Science: The Ethical Choreography of Stem Cell Research - Charis Thompson

“Janelle Lamoreaux’s Infertile Environments is a beautifully written book that has the virtues of a classic ethnography, both providing specificity of time and place and shedding light on broader trends at the intersection of science and society and enduring epistemological and ontological questions. The five palimpsests of Nanjing epigenetic toxicology—national, hormonal, dietary, maternal, and laboratory environments—work beautifully to highlight what is at stake in modern toxic exposures and their effects on gendered reproductive ability. In addition, Lamoreaux situates the book through concise and generously cited accounts of scholarship on reproductive technologies and on the history of modern Chinese biology.”

Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship - Sarah Franklin

“Janelle Lamoreaux’s deep ethnographic dive into genotoxicity not only reinvents biological anthropology and environmental studies; it offers us a whole new perspective on reproductive politics. This is a brilliant must-read with profound implications for how we understand race, sex, gender, and nation as well as science, food, and DNA.”

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