Pro-Life Activism, Abortion and Subjectivity Before Birth: Discursive Practices and Anthropological Perspectives
Abstract
This paper is intended as a critical examination of pro-life discursive practices. It is based on ethnographic research
conducted in Lombardia (northern Italy) among a group of pro-life activists. Pro-life activism in Italy has a predominantly Catholic
matrix and subjects who participated in my research mainly come from a Catholic background. However, their discursive
strategies are not framed in religious terms. Although informed by ethical concerns, pro-life activists make a great use of
scientific material (images and descriptions of intrauterine development) to advocate their idea of the fetus as a human being
with a right to life and to prove that subjectivity precedes birth. In this paper I consider the empirical and theoretical implications
of the overlapping of moral issues and scientific knowledge. On one hand, pro-life activists emphasize the similarities between
the fetus and the newborn child; they also attribute the unborn some of the characteristics of the Western-informed notion of
person: individuality, autonomy, the ability to communicate and interact, and some form of consciousness. I argue that the
definition of fetus as person relies on a teleology of vital processes that presupposes a specific moral order. On the other hand,
pro-life discursive practices allow to reconsider the uses of the Western idea of the person at the margins of human life and to
articulate a critical approach to the biologization of the abortion debate.
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