Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Childless Women in Georgia

View through CrossRef
In vitro fertilisation (IVF) is gradually becoming available in Georgia, but while the medical technologies are being developed, the Georgian Orthodox Church opposes the idea of having a child through what it declares to be unnatural ways. Despite the authority of the Church, the Orthodox discourse about IVF is not directly incorporated into the everyday lives of people. Ethnographical observation has allowed an exploration of how childless women in Georgia reconcile modern reproductive technologies with their religion. In order to explain the hybridity in women’s attempts to make official religiosity better adapted to everyday life, I use the concept of bricolage as applied to the social practices of women who assemble different, seemingly disjointed, resources in coping with problematic situations.
Title: Childless Women in Georgia
Description:
In vitro fertilisation (IVF) is gradually becoming available in Georgia, but while the medical technologies are being developed, the Georgian Orthodox Church opposes the idea of having a child through what it declares to be unnatural ways.
Despite the authority of the Church, the Orthodox discourse about IVF is not directly incorporated into the everyday lives of people.
Ethnographical observation has allowed an exploration of how childless women in Georgia reconcile modern reproductive technologies with their religion.
In order to explain the hybridity in women’s attempts to make official religiosity better adapted to everyday life, I use the concept of bricolage as applied to the social practices of women who assemble different, seemingly disjointed, resources in coping with problematic situations.

Related Results

Elections and election fraud in Georgia and Armenia
Elections and election fraud in Georgia and Armenia
Elections on unfair playing fields are common. Yet election day fraud can result in authoritarians losing office. The freer the environment, the more an authoritarian must rely on ...
Cherokee Pottery from Northern Georgia
Cherokee Pottery from Northern Georgia
From November 15, 1950, to April 7, 1951, an archaeological survey was conducted by the Smithsonian River Basin Surveys, in cooperation with the National Park Service and the Corps...
Ideological Impact on Social-Economic Development of the Region of Tusheti (Georgia) after WWII
Ideological Impact on Social-Economic Development of the Region of Tusheti (Georgia) after WWII
The paper deals with one of the highland regions of Eastern Georgia - Tusheti, which represents a geoeconomic and ethnocultural phenomenon from a scientific and worldview perspecti...
PATRIARCHAL IDEOLOGY IN WORKS OF VISUAL ART OF BALINESE CONTEMPORARY WOMEN ARTISTS
PATRIARCHAL IDEOLOGY IN WORKS OF VISUAL ART OF BALINESE CONTEMPORARY WOMEN ARTISTS
Human problems are faced faced by Indonesian contemporary visual artists. However, the most typical are the problems faced by contemporary women visual artists, including those fac...
The Role of Women in the Educational System of Turkey after WWII
The Role of Women in the Educational System of Turkey after WWII
The study of women's issues, the feminist movement, as an academic discipline, and the first curriculum were established in the University of San Diego in 1970. The women’s problem...
From Seoul to Paris
From Seoul to Paris
The Korean National Council of Women, a women’s organization established in 1959, has received criticism in Korean literature for its collaboration with the authoritarian regimes t...
Islamic Art and Architecture in a Contested Region: Negotiating the Muslim Heritage in Meskheti, Georgia
Islamic Art and Architecture in a Contested Region: Negotiating the Muslim Heritage in Meskheti, Georgia
This article draws upon fieldwork carried out in the Meskheti (Ahıska) region of modern Georgia to introduce, analyse, and discuss local mosque architecture. The region’s Islamic a...

Back to Top