Abstract

ABSTRACT Through ‘Aneuploidy’ I poeticise bioethicist Chris Kaposy’s lived experience of prenatal screening as expressed in a personal essay that recounts how he reacted to the positive result of Down Syndrome testing for his unborn son. The poem aims to capture the shock of the unexpected diagnosis through the morbidities that are evoked and associated with the condition. It also offers a poeticised exposé of ‘neoliberal perfectionism’ a term Kaposy uses to critique the technologisation of reproduction that can encourage a norm of ableist perfectionism. A prominent motive, he argues, for seeking to terminate foetuses with Down Syndrome is the belief that children born with the condition are limited market actors with diminished economic opportunities. Similarly, the poet asks readers to reconsider the neoliberal, societal dictates that lead to the stigmatisation of people with disabilities and the empathic potential of poetry and its ability to delineate complex, reprogenetic consumption scenarios.

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