Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions

The rapid development of procreation techniques has had the consequence of detaching gametes (the sperm and egg) from the rest of the person’s body, by making it possible to extract them for laboratory reproduction in vitro—no longer in vivo during a sexual relationship. But these forms of reproduct...

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Main Author: Corinne Fortier
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2019-07-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/11063
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author Corinne Fortier
author_facet Corinne Fortier
author_sort Corinne Fortier
collection DOAJ
description The rapid development of procreation techniques has had the consequence of detaching gametes (the sperm and egg) from the rest of the person’s body, by making it possible to extract them for laboratory reproduction in vitro—no longer in vivo during a sexual relationship. But these forms of reproduction without any sexual relationship nevertheless have a sexual character. In fact, even though it is taken for granted that assisted reproductive technologies have separated procreation from sexuality, the latter is far from having vanished from this way of procreating, as forcefully revealed by an examination of monotheistic religions with regard to these new techniques, especially when the techniques involve a third party, reviving the spectre of adultery and incest. On these subjects, Islam will be compared with other monotheisms, specifically Judaism and Roman Catholicism.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2117-3869
language fra
publishDate 2019-07-01
publisher Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative
record_format Article
series Ateliers d'Anthropologie
spelling doaj-art-f50f122216cd42a188a157a09f7a5f222025-01-30T13:42:03ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692019-07-014610.4000/ateliers.11063Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religionsCorinne FortierThe rapid development of procreation techniques has had the consequence of detaching gametes (the sperm and egg) from the rest of the person’s body, by making it possible to extract them for laboratory reproduction in vitro—no longer in vivo during a sexual relationship. But these forms of reproduction without any sexual relationship nevertheless have a sexual character. In fact, even though it is taken for granted that assisted reproductive technologies have separated procreation from sexuality, the latter is far from having vanished from this way of procreating, as forcefully revealed by an examination of monotheistic religions with regard to these new techniques, especially when the techniques involve a third party, reviving the spectre of adultery and incest. On these subjects, Islam will be compared with other monotheisms, specifically Judaism and Roman Catholicism.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/11063IslamsexualityreligionCatholicismJudaismassisted reproductive technology (ART)
spellingShingle Corinne Fortier
Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Islam
sexuality
religion
Catholicism
Judaism
assisted reproductive technology (ART)
title Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
title_full Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
title_fullStr Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
title_full_unstemmed Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
title_short Procréations médicalement assistées, sexualité et religions
title_sort procreations medicalement assistees sexualite et religions
topic Islam
sexuality
religion
Catholicism
Judaism
assisted reproductive technology (ART)
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/11063
work_keys_str_mv AT corinnefortier procreationsmedicalementassisteessexualiteetreligions