Journal Article


A pregnant pause: Pregnancy, miscarriage and suspended time

Abstract

This article takes the rupturing of normative linear reproductive time that occurs in the event of miscarriage as a potentially generative philosophical moment – a catalyst to rethink pregnancy aside from the expectation of child production. Pregnant time is usually imagined as a linear passage toward birth; accordingly, the one who “miscarries” appears as suspended within an arrested journey that never arrived at its destination, or indeed, as ejected from pregnant time altogether. But here I propose to rethink both pregnancy and miscarriage through the lens of “suspended time” - a theoretical move that shifts the accent from the future as the dominating frame of reference to the lived present. Drawing on work by Kathryn Bond Stockton, Lauren Berlant, Lisa Baraitser and others, the article explores overlooked temporalities of pregnancy and miscarriage that operate not in the mode of futural projection or futural loss, but rather, through present-oriented forms of adjustment and sensing, attachment and intimacy, ritual and routine, maintenance and care. By “suspending the future”, then, we can resist the oppositional framing of pregnancy and miscarriage, because if pregnant time is not represented in exclusively future-oriented terms as being-towards-birth, then miscarriage need not be understood as pregnancy’s undoing.

Attached files

Authors

Browne, Victoria

Oxford Brookes departments

Department of Social Sciences

Dates

Year of publication: 2022
Date of RADAR deposit: 2021-07-05


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License


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