Ann Burlein,
"The Molecular Body and the Christian Secular"
(page 6 of 7)
Despite these quite considerable changes in how molecular medicine
positions us to inhabit a molecular body, I contend that medicine still
narrates sexual sermons whose revolutionary lyricism calls us to take up
forms of sexualized personhood. That is, molecular medicine articulates
its dream of smart touch by backgrounding reproduction and identity in
favor of foregrounding a different dimension of 'sexuality': the
domestic romance, and through it, the everyday pleasures of
conventionality.
For despite the talk of DNA as 'uniquely you,' and despite the
flattening of mommy-Daddy-Oedipus that molecular memories
enable[81],
genetic medicine insistently embeds the individual within "the
background-body, the body behind the abnormal body ... the parents' body,
the ancestors' body, the body of the family, the body of
heredity."[82]
Genetic diagnosis applies not just to the individual who goes to the
doctor, but also potentially to family members. Sometimes people cannot
even be diagnosed without family members donating blood to establish
genetic markers. But if the family is still power's point of access to
the body, its present-day power-knowledge relations proliferate the
anomalous forces of a de-standardized body, and do so in order to
generate promissory value from this body's capacity for future capacity.
In today's clinic, it is not death (and the stigma of 'species'
identity) but the intimate, domestic family that provides the obligatory
passage point to knowledge about individuals as well as to citizenship.
One can see this shift in the dispositive of
'sexuality'—a shift that backgrounds both reproduction and identity in favor of
foregrounding the domestic romance—in the changing status of
homosexuality. In its recent Lawrence decision, the U.S. Supreme
Court explicitly argued against identifying non-procreative
homosexuality with death (the argument of Bowers vs. Hardwick).
But Lawrence is far from protecting sexual relations as sites of
dissent for the invention of unforeseen modes of life that might
proliferate amid current confusions regarding normal and pathological
growth.[83]
Lawrence de-criminalized sodomy only in the private
space of a domestic couple for whom (to quote Justice Kennedy) sex "can
be but one element in a personal bond that is more
enduring."[84] Queer
sexuality can be recognized—so long as 'sexuality' is domesticated
through romantic love.
More generally, I think that the molecular body is routed through the
family romance. Its plotlines are those of gender. As Lauren Berlant
reminds us, gender is a genre, a
convention.[85] Looking at gender as by
definition involved with conventions and their pleasures, can help make
sense of the fact that molecular medical technologies have become sites
for the relentless reinscription of the very desire for conventionality.
It is through speaking to the everyday pleasures of the conventional
that the narratives of molecular medicine produce the sense of an ending
(which is also a beginning: for that ambiguity is key to romance).
So while it might at first seem counter-intuitive, I contend that
even artificial reproductive technologies work by backgrounding
reproduction in favor of routing 'sexuality' through the gendered
romance. It is a common but mistaken assumption that people use
artificial reproductive technologies because they want a child who is
'just like them.' In their recent ethnography of preimplantation genetic
diagnosis (PGD) in Britain, Franklin and Roberts argue against this
assumption of geneticization. They found that most couples who opted for
PGD did so not of a desire for a 'designer baby' (in the words of media
stereotypes) but rather, out of "a painful and expensive sense of
obligation to act responsibly."[86]
They quote: "It was different with
Chloe, because we didn't know we were carriers until we had her, but now
we do know, and there's no way we can have two of our babies dying in
the hospital, we just can't do that."[87]
Such couples often see PGD as
a choice that is no choice, even though PGD makes it harder to bear a
child. Why then not just adopt? The people whom Franklin and Roberts
interviewed spoke not of 'geneticization' but of romance: the desire to
have the child of one's partner.[88]
Their interviewees spoke of desire
and duty—a somatic ethics whose key is 'sexuality'—albeit not as (I
have said repeatedly) in the sense of reproduction or individual
identity. Instead, molecular medicine deploys the dispositive of
'sexuality' through the domain of affective intimacy and familial
belonging. To my mind, it is the way that molecular medicine preaches
'the domestic family' that explains why the new technologies for
artificial reproduction have not troubled traditional notions of gender
and family in the ways that feminist activists and scholars once thought
they would.
If so, then Nikolas Rose's characterization of the ethics emerging
around molecular medicine as "somatic individuality" misses a crucial
dimension of how people engage with (and are engaged by) molecular
medicine. Rose develops his notion of "somatic individuality" by drawing
on Max Weber's argument that early modern capitalism depended on the
Protestant invention of worldly asceticism. Without such a 'spirit,'
what sense did continuous work that eschewed
enjoyment make?[89] Arguing
analogously, Rose suggests that we in today's wealthy West are enjoined
to work on the vital processes of our body and minds as ends in
themselves. What saves this task from being "derided as obsessive or
narcissistic self-absorption," Rose contends, are forms of somatic
individuality in which people take up ethical practices of somatic
stewardship. Just as worldly asceticism provided the crucial 'spirit' by
which people could inhabit the socio-economic relations of capitalism,
so these forms of "somatic individuality" enable neoliberal societies to
"accord a particular moral virtue to the search for profit through the
management of life."[90]
But as I have been trying to show, the care for the 'self' that is
emerging across the various sub-disciplines of molecular medicine is
always already care of familial others. The key marker in this emerging
somatic ethics is the dream of pre-emptive optimization of "the body
behind the abnormal body, the body of the family." In short, molecular
medicine is crafting a new sick role, whose contours are not well
captured in Rose's notion of 'somatic individuality.'[91]
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