In this Book

Domesticating Organ Transplant: Familial Sacrifice and National Aspiration in Mexico

Book
Megan Crowley-Matoka
2016
Published by: Duke University Press
summary
Organ transplant in Mexico is overwhelmingly a family matter, utterly dependent on kidneys from living relatives—not from stranger donors typical elsewhere. Yet Mexican transplant is also a public affair that is proudly performed primarily in state-run hospitals. In Domesticating Organ Transplant, Megan Crowley-Matoka examines the intimate dynamics and complex politics of kidney transplant, drawing on extensive fieldwork with patients, families, medical professionals, and government and religious leaders in Guadalajara. Weaving together haunting stories and sometimes surprising statistics culled from hundreds of transplant cases, she offers nuanced insight into the way iconic notions about mothers, miracles, and mestizos shape how some lives are saved and others are risked through transplantation. Crowley-Matoka argues that as familial donors render transplant culturally familiar, this fraught form of medicine is deeply enabled in Mexico by its domestication as both private matter of home and proud product of the nation. Analyzing the everyday effects of transplant’s own iconic power as an intervention that exemplifies medicine’s death-defying promise and commodifying perils, Crowley-Matoka illuminates how embodied experience, clinical practice, and national identity produce one another.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-Title Page, Title Page

Copyright, Dedication

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xiv

Introduction

pp. 1-30

Part I. Giving Kidneys (or Not)

1. Living Organ Donation, Bioavailability, and Ethical Domesticity

pp. 31-64

2. Cadaveric Organ Donation, Biounavailability, and Slippery States

pp. 65-106

Part II. Getting Kidneys (or Not)

3. Being Worthy of Transplant, Embodying Transplant’s Worth

pp. 107-146

4. The Unsung Story of Posttransplant Life

pp. 147-184

Part III. Framing Transplantation

5. Gifts, Commodities, and Analytic Icons in the Anthropological Lives of Organs

pp. 185-224

6. Scientists, Saints, and Monsters in Transplant Medicine

pp. 225-260

Coda

pp. 261-266

Notes

pp. 267-284

References

pp. 285-306

Index

pp. 307-322
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