Abstract
Within the expanding bioeconomy of assisted reproduction, there are limitations to providing quality informed consent for egg donation when the long-term risks remain unknown. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Barcelona with egg donors and in vitro fertilization (IVF) professionals, in this paper, we speak of “temporal choreography” to describe how clinical practices delimit and circumscribe the information that will be offered to egg donors by positioning them in an immediate present or “temporal stasis” in which future risks of egg donation are precluded, and consideration of possible future uses or distribution of eggs is truncated. These aspects intersect with the biographical temporality of egg donors, who are mostly young and economically precarious. This choreography is essential to the commercial success of the Spanish egg donation industry, which is the largest in Europe. This article engages with the emerging interest in temporality and IVF by questioning whose bodies are positioned to anticipate risks and fertility as an act of self-care and whose are encouraged to cast aside concerns about harms in favor of short-term monetary gains.
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