On the Cover: The Politics of Seeing Pregnancy
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URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/107189Metadatos
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2025-10-16Patrocinador
The research behind this essay was developed within the two research projects funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation: Ontologías híbridas: objetos científicos y culturas visuales entre la industria, la clínica y el laboratorio (grant PID2019- 106971GB-I00 funded by MICIU/AEI /10.13039/501100011033), and Juicios por aborto en la España democrática: derechos reproductivos, culturas materiales y culturas legales de la IVE (1970s–2000s) (grant PID2023-147989NB-I00, funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by ERDF, EU).Resumen
Frida Kahlo’s artistic rendering of childbirth appears on the cover of this issue of Technology and Culture. This essay invites readers to view the history of medicine and technology through images, by tracing multi-sited genealogies of their visual cultures. The shifting representations of pregnancy, miscarriage, and abortion can enrich historical research and teaching on twentieth-century reproductive biomedicine by foregrounding how images produce, circulate, and contest knowledge and power. Yet the different meanings attributed to the same image in different cultures and political regimes underscore that they cannot be fully understood without their historiography and their political work as visual artifacts





