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Body & Society
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Commodity Fetishism in Organs Trafficking

Nancy Scheper-Hughes

University of California, Berkeley.

This article draws on a five-year, multi-sited transnational research project on the global traffic in human organs, tissues, and body parts from the living as well as from the dead as a misrecognized form of human sacrifice. Capitalist expansion and the spread of advanced medical and surgical techniques and developments in biotechnology have incited new tastes and traffic in the skin, bones, blood, organs, tissues, marrow and reproductive and genetic marginalized other. Examples drawn from recent ethnographic research in Israel, the Palestinian Authority and Turkey serve to cast light on the dark side of organs harvesting and transplantation. The article focuses on the dangers of the `fetishized kidney' for both sellers and buyers, for whom this new commodity has become an organ of opportunity and an organ of last resort. The bodily sacrifice is disguised as a donation, rendered invisible by its anonymity, and hidden under the medical rhetoric of `life saving' and `gift giving'. It suggests that the ultimate fetish as recognized long ago by Ivan Illich is the idea of `life' as object of manipulation.

Key Words: commodity fetishism • excluded patient populations • gift ideology • globalization • human sacrifice • kidney donors • medical trafficking • organ transplant

Body & Society, Vol. 7, No. 2-3, 31-62 (2001)
DOI: 10.1177/1357034X0100700203


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