Description
The question "Where do we come from?" has fascinated philosophers, scientists, and artists for generations. This book reorients the question of the matrix as a place where everything comes from (chora, womb, incubator) by recasting it in terms of acts of "matrixial/maternal hospitality" that produce space and matter of / for the other. Systematic acknowledgment of the acts of making space and matter reintroduces the maternal role in generation and contributes to current debates in biomedicine, especially in theoretical biology, embryology, and reproductive immunology of the maternal-fetal interface. Building on and critically evaluating a wide range of historical and contemporary scholarship, Irina Aristarkhova applies her theoretical framework to the science, technology, and art of ectogenesis (artificial wombs and placentas; neonatal incubators; and male pregnancies). Her formulation of matrixial/maternal hospitality provides a framework for rethinking traditional concepts of space and generation and our ability to imagine ethically grounded relations between self and other. Her book relates to contemporary feminist theory and the philosophy of birth and generation and their figurations in biomedical sciences, technologies, and culture.
About the Author
Irina Aristarkhova is associate professor of women's studies and visual art at Pennsylvania State University, University Park. She edited and contributed to the volume Woman Does Not Exist: Contemporary Studies of Sexual Difference and to the Russian translation of Luce Irigaray's An Ethics of Sexual Difference.
Reviews
Every feminist scholar interested in the spaces, practices, limits, and social meanings of motherhood will want to read this book. Irina Aristarkhova's erudite, intrepid exploration of the meaning of the matrix in philosophy, embryology, biomedicine, nursing, and performance art is a tour de force of feminist scholarship. Bringing together matter, mind, and new media, her book demonstrates how a full understanding of the matrix dramatically expands the meaning of hospitality itself. -- Susan Squier, author of Liminal Lives: Imagining the Human at the Frontiers of Biomedicine Aristarkhova makes an original and fascinating contribution by spelling out the matrixial/maternal relation as a matter of hosting the other. She opens an alternative vision of self-other relations that redefines philosophical, technological, biomedical, and cultural/aesthetic vocabularies by challenging them to welcome the mother. Artists, thinkers, and scientists interested in the studies of generation, its matter and form, human-machine relation, and biomedical technologies will find this book indispensible and full of new ideas. -- Faith Wilding, artist, Guggenheim Fellow, cofounder of subRosa, a cyberfeminist art collective, and professor emerita, School of the Art Institute of Chicago original and thought-provoking... -- Luna Dolezal Hospitality and Society
Book Information
ISBN 9780231159296
Author Irina Aristarkhova
Format Paperback
Page Count 248
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press