Social egg freezing as ambivalent materialities of aging

J Aging Stud. 2023 Dec:67:101183. doi: 10.1016/j.jaging.2023.101183. Epub 2023 Sep 26.

Abstract

This commentary explores how the material-nonmaterial transactions around reproduction among women raise paradoxical questions of reproductive autonomy and commercialization of reproduction. Drawing from medical anthropological studies on human reproduction, the technology around social egg freezing has been conceived to proffer ambivalent possibilities of hope, despair, and repair as mature women recalibrate their reproductive identities, especially in pronatalist contexts. Building on the material-discursive critique of the 'material turn', I ask if social egg freezing offers an empowering biological reprieve for women who have 'chosen' a non-normative (i.e., a departure from heterosexual conjugality) life-course. Subsequently, how does one "do age" when material entanglements (here, reproductive technologies) disrupt the symbolic performance of the life-course? Or, does this reproductive autonomy actualized through social egg freezing align well with the neoliberal prerogatives of "successful aging," thereby intensifying the specter of the "Third Age"? Overall, through an analysis of (reproductive) technologies, as well as the question of choice and social bodies, I argue how new materialities and anxieties of growing old can undergird the material-cultural link in gerontology.

Keywords: Biomedicalization of reproduction; Material turn; Social egg-freezing; The Third Age.

MeSH terms

  • Aging
  • Cryopreservation
  • Female
  • Fertility Preservation*
  • Humans