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Making Technology Familiar: Orthodox Jews and Infertility SUPPORT, Advice, and Inspiration

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Abstract

This paper examines how orthodox Jews use traditional strategies and new media simultaneously to cope with infertility in the age of new reproductive technologies. Not only have they used the Internet to establish support, information, and educational networks, but also they have created frameworks for unique professional collaborations among rabbis, doctors, and clinic personnel in order to ensure that their fertility treatments are conducted with strict attention to Jewish legal concerns, particularly with regard to incest, adultery, and traditional practices regarding bodily emissions. Throughout these processes, they have innovated a hybrid language for describing and explaining infertility treatments that blends Hebrew prayers, Yiddish aphorisms, English slang, Gematria (numerology), and biomedical terminology. By using idiomatic language and folk practice, orthodox Jews construct a unique terrain that shapes and makes familiar their experience and understanding of fertility treatment. Biomedicine in this context is understood as a set of tools and strategies that can be readily appropriated and harnessed to a particular set of individual and collective goals.

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Correspondence to Susan Martha Kahn.

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Kahn, S.M. Making Technology Familiar: Orthodox Jews and Infertility SUPPORT, Advice, and Inspiration. Cult Med Psychiatry 30, 467–480 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11013-006-9029-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11013-006-9029-8

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