Abstract

This paper explores the clinical pedigree as a risk technique within the context of the predictive genetic testing (PGT) clinic. We situate the PGT clinic as a site of genetic governance in that it is a site both for the production of knowledge about genetic risk and for intervening in the everyday lives of individuals and their families who learn to cultivate their relations with themselves and their biological relatives in relation to genetic risk knowledge. Drawing on literature of the pedigree as socially constructed and on notions of risk governance, we suggest that the pedigree operates as an epistemological tool and risk technique – that is, as a visual device that assists in organizing the social relations of knowledge production and aids in effecting shifts in patient subjectivity in ways that are consistent with neoliberal notions of active citizenship.

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