Edinburgh Research Archive

Good soldiers, good guys, and good parents: the meanings of donation and donated tissue in the context of the Danish donor sperm industry

dc.contributor.advisor
Haddow, Gillian
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dc.contributor.advisor
Bruce, Ann
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dc.contributor.author
Wheatley, Alison Louise
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Innogen Institute
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dc.date.accessioned
2018-01-25T13:27:47Z
dc.date.available
2018-01-25T13:27:47Z
dc.date.issued
2016-06-29
dc.description.abstract
Denmark is a major exporter of both anonymous and identity-release donor sperm worldwide, and is home to one the world's largest sperm bank networks. The country's legal framework allows for sperm donors to make the choice whether to be anonymous or to release their identity to potential offspring, in contrast to the majority of European countries which require either anonymity or identity-release donation. As such, it represents a chance for researchers to draw comparisons between donors who have explicitly made these different choices. This thesis draws on data from thirteen in-depth semi-structured interviews carried out with donors at a major Danish sperm bank. I suggest that neither the traditional ‘beer money for the weekend’ nor the currently-popular ‘wanting to help’ narrative of sperm donation tells the full story; the experiences of these donors cannot be expressed fully using an altruistic gifting model, but neither are they fully captured in terms of the capitalist exchange of labour; as ‘help’ or as ‘work’. Donor virility, and by extension masculinity, is represented through sperm quality and the discourse of “good sperm”, which then explicitly informs donor payment, complicating the relationship between donors’ embodied experience, their pride in their ‘product’ and the various ways in which semen as a substance is understood: “good sperm” could make a donor into a ‘good guy’ who could help with the falling national birth count, whereas sperm that was “bad” could be reframed as the product of donors’ lifestyles or as ‘good soldiers’ fighting against the freezing process. Donor accounts of sperm donation were also informed by the wider web of connections that are formed through the process of sperm donation: real, potential, or imagined connections between donor and offspring, donor and their imagined ‘good’ recipient, offspring and donor families, and donors and the wider Danish nation in terms of the production of so-called ‘Viking sperm’ and the extension of the ‘help’ discourse through the falling Danish sperm count.
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http://hdl.handle.net/1842/26038
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en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Wheatley, A. (2010). Donor Insemination: The Role of the Internet in the Experiences of Donor Offspring, DI Parents and Donors. Reinvention: A Journal of Undergraduate Research, 3(2). Retrieved from http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/iatl/ejournal/issues/volume3issue2/w heatley/
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Wheatley, A. (2011). Congratulations, it’s a Viking!: Media Representations of Anglo-Danish Reproductive Tourism. University of Warwick.
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dc.subject
donor insemination
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sperm donor
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Denmark
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families
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assisted reproductive technologies
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dc.title
Good soldiers, good guys, and good parents: the meanings of donation and donated tissue in the context of the Danish donor sperm industry
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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