Class and Ethnicity in the Global Market for Organs: The Case of Korean Cinema [Book Review]

Journal of Medical Humanities 28 (4):213-229 (2007)
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Abstract

While organ transplantation has been established in the medical imagination since the 1960s, this technology is currently undergoing a popular re-imagination in the era of global capitalism. As transplantation procedures have become routine in medical centers in non-Western and developing nations and as organ sales and transplant tourism become increasingly common, organs that function as a material resource increasingly derive from subaltern bodies. This essay explores this development as represented in Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook’s 2002 Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, focusing on the ethnic and class characteristics of the global market in organs and possible modes of counter-logic to transplant technologies and related ethical discourses

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Society must be defended: lectures at the Collège de France, 1975-76.Michel Foucault - 2003 - New York: Picador. Edited by Mauro Bertani, Alessandro Fontana, François Ewald & David Macey.
In defense of a regulated market in kidneys from living vendors.Benjamin E. Hippen - 2005 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 30 (6):593 – 626.
Blinkered bioethics.S. R. Benatar - 2004 - Journal of Medical Ethics 30 (3):291-292.
Using personal narratives to encourage organ donation.Ellen M. McGee - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (4):19 – 20.

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