Résumés
Abstract
In this paper, I use an autoethnographic approach to explore the fertility processes I underwent and the difficulties I had in accessing fertility services in an effort to get pregnant as a fat single mother by choice. Here, I outline my experiences at two different fertility clinics, one of which denied me care based on my fatness. I reflect on the difficulties of accessing fertility services as a fat woman, and indeed how fat women are viewed as risky bodies to be deterred from motherhood. I conclude this paper by situating the joyous delivery of my son against the backdrop of being “high risk.”
Keywords:
- artificial insemination,
- fatphobia,
- motherhood,
- fat mothering,
- single mother by choice
Résumé
Dans cet article, j’adopte une approche auto-ethnographique pour explorer les processus de fertilité que j’ai subis et les difficultés que j’ai rencontrées pour obtenir des services de fertilité dans le but de tomber enceinte alors que j’étais une mère obèse célibataire par choix. Je décris ici mes expériences dans deux cliniques de fertilité, dont l’une m’a refusé des soins en raison de ma corpulence. Je réfléchis aux difficultés d’accès aux services de fertilité pour les femmes grosses, et au fait qu’on les considère comme des corps à risque qu’il faut dissuader d’être mères. Je conclus cet article en soulignant que le merveilleux accouchement de mon fils s’est bien déroulé malgré le fait qu’il était à « risque élevé ».
Mots-clés :
- insémination artificielle,
- grossophobie,
- maternité,
- mères grosses,
- mères célibataires par choix
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Parties annexes
Biographical note
Kelsey Ioannoni, PhD, (she/her) is a fat solo mom and a sociologist who explores the way that body size, specifically fatness, impacts the ability of fat Canadian women to access healthcare services. Her research interests are centred around the fat body, weight-based politics, and weight-based discrimination. Her current research looks at the ways in which fat Canadian women understand their bodies through the lens of the “obesity epidemic,” and ways in which this lens results in antagonistic relationships with their bodies. These feelings carry over to healthcare spaces where practitioners often hold anti-fat bias, resulting in weight-based discrimination and experiences of fatphobia in healthcare. Further, Kelsey is passionate about investigating the ways in which fat women experience discrimination related to reproductive health and access to reproductive assistance.
Bibliography
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