经胎盘和分子迁移:异氰酸甲酯气体和生殖生物经济在博帕尔

Deboleena Roy
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摘要

在这篇文章中,女权主义和后殖民主义的分布式再生产和前置化学品的框架被用来进一步探索全球生育链的概念。特别是,这些方法用于追踪在分子和生理水平上传播的生殖生物经济,并将1984年博帕尔毒气悲剧所涉及的化合物异氰酸甲酯(MIC)与最近在同一个博帕尔市的生殖技术和代孕服务的增长联系起来。本文的目标是通过不同世代的人类和非人类行为者确定和背景mic介导的化学毒性的垂直和水平传播,并了解这种毒性如何与生殖生物经济联系在一起,因为我们继续绘制全球生育链,并特别重视地点,规模和生物边界问题。分布式繁殖使我们能够重新思考繁殖的范围,并使支持毒性分子和生理传播的殖民地基础设施清晰可辨。在化学MIC的前沿,我们可以追溯殖民遗产的具体途径,这些遗产假设了不受限制地获取从博帕尔的土壤、植物、动物和人类中提取的原材料和生物劳动力。本文探讨了化学MIC作为生物政治迁移的催化剂的作用,从而有助于在新的分子和生理尺度上扩展对全球生育链的认识。
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Transplacental and Molecular Migrations: Methyl Isocyanate Gas and Reproductive Bioeconomies in Bhopal
In this article, the feminist and postcolonial frameworks of distributed reproduction and frontstaging a chemical are used to further explore the concept of global fertility chains. In particular, these approaches are used to trace reproductive bioeconomies that are traveling at the molecular and physiological levels and that link the chemical compound methyl isocyanate (MIC) involved in the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy to the recent growth of reproductive technologies and surrogacy services in the very same city of Bhopal. The goal of this paper is to identify and contextualize the vertical and horizontal transmission of MIC-mediated chemical toxicity through different generations of human and nonhuman actors, and to understand how this toxicity connects to reproductive bioeconomies as we continue to map out global fertility chains and give particular importance to matters of place, scale, and biological borders. Distributed reproduction allows us to rethink the scope of reproduction and make legible the colonial infrastructures that support the molecular and physiological transmission of toxicities. Frontstaging the chemical MIC allows us to trace the specific pathways of colonial legacies that have assumed unfettered access to raw materials and biolabor extracted from the soil, plants, animals, and humans in Bhopal. The paper explores the role that the chemical MIC plays as a catalyst for the transplacental migration of biopolitics—thereby contributing to an extended appreciation of global fertility chains at new molecular and physiological scales.
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