Summary/Abstract |
This paper examines the ways in which egg donors, surrogate mothers, and intended parents in India imagine and unimagine their relationship with children born through third-party reproduction. Third-party reproduction is inseparable from plural parenthood and the question of who the ‘real’ parents are. In a legal and medical context, gestational surrogacy in India treats surrogates as not ‘real’ mothers, in favour of the ‘natural’ relationship between the intended mother and child. Here, the ‘genetic tie’ may ignore gestation in giving predominance to ‘genes’, but this logic is inverted in the case of egg donation, in which it is not uncommon for people to regard egg donors as ‘real’ mothers. Who is regarded as a ‘real’ parent, and who is not, is deeply embedded in the social process of creating kinship, shared notions of bodily substances, corporeal reality, and social recognition of ‘one’s own child’. The elements of gestation, genetic relations, and nurturing compete and coexist in the practice of third-party reproduction. This paper explores the multiple aspects of ‘real’ and ‘fictive’ kinship and its entanglement in making ‘a child of one’s own’ in third-party reproduction in India.
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