Bioethics Beyond Altruism Donating and Transforming Human Biological Materials

(Wang) #1
12 Towards Social Maternity: Where’s the Mother? ... 317

Skitolsky, L. (2012). Tales of the tit: The moral and political implications of
useless lactational suffering. In S. Lintott & M. Sander-Staudt (Eds.),
Philosophical inquiries into pregnancy, childbirth and mothering: Maternal
subjects (pp. 64–78). London: Routledge.
Smith, J. (2013). Lost milk? Counting the economic value: Counting the eco-
nomic value of breastmilk in gross domestic product. Journal of Human
Lactation XX: 10, 1–10.
Smith, J., & Ingham, L. H. (2005). ‘Mothers’ milk and measures of economic
output. Feminist Economics, 11 (1), 41–62.
Stephens, J. (2012). Confronting postmaternal thinking: Feminism, memory and
care. New York: Columbia University Press.
Stephens, J. (2015). Reconfiguring care and family in the era of the “out-
sourced self ”. Journal of Family Studies, 21 (3), 208–217.
Swanson, K. (2014). Banking on the body: The market in blood, milk, and sperm
in modern America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Tavakoli, A. (2014). Defining my breastfeeding experience: Inclusive breast-
feeding. Retrieved September 13, 2016, from http://www.sdbfc.com/
blog/2014/6/2/defining-my-breastfeeding-experience-inclusive-breastfeed-
ing.html.
Tawla, S. (2013). Milk sharing, milk handling, and ‘contamination’ of breast-
milk, Australian breastfeeding association. Retrieved October 28, 2016,
from https://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/milk-sharing-milk-handling-and-
‘contamination’-breastmilk.
Thoits, P. A., & Hewitt, L. N. (2001). Volunteer work and well-being. Journal
of Health and Social Behaviour, 42 (2), 115–131.
Tugwell, S. (2013). Imagining the unimaginable: Theorising maternal subjectivity
through the representation of breastfeeding. Unpublished Masters dissertation,
Birkbeck, University of London.
Waring, M. (1988). Counting for nothing: What men value and what women are
worth. Wellington, New Zealand: Allen & Unwin.
Wolf, J. H. (1999). ‘Mercenary hirelings’ or a ‘great blessing’? Doctors’ and
mothers’ conflicted perceptions of wet nurses and the ramifications for
infant feeding in Chicago, 1871–1961. Journal of Social History, 33 (1),
97–120.

Free download pdf