Dr Liberty Barnes : Where are all the Infertile Men? A Sociological Look at Male Infertility and Masculinity

Duration: 30 mins 29 secs
Share this media item:
Embed this media item:


About this item
media item has no image
Description: Infertile men are conspicuously absent from IVF clinics, social science research and public discourse on infertility in the United States. In order to track down infertile men and investigate the relationship between men’s fertility status and masculinity, sociologist Liberty Walther Barnes shadowed male infertility medical doctors in the U.S. and interviewed their patients. While all twenty-four of the patients interviewed fit the clinical definition of infertility, fully two-thirds of them did not self identify as infertile. In this presentation, Dr. Barnes argues that infertile men are powerful players in the social constructions of disease and gender and that their resistance to the “infertile” label explains, in part, the invisibility of male infertility. Men employ a variety of strategies to reconceptualize their inability to conceive in terms that feel less threatening to their personal sense of masculinity. These include: focusing on the etiology of their infertility, referring to their inability to conceive as “just a medical condition,” over-emphasizing any positive aspects of their fertility status, characterizing infertility as a minor symptom of a more complex health issue, or outright denying the diagnosis and its association with masculinity. Dr. Barnes concludes that the social processes of constructing disease and gender are inextricably intertwined in the case of male infertility.
 
Created: 2013-09-12 09:33
Collection: Cambridge Interdisciplinary Reproduction Forum (CIRF)
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Glenn Jobson
Language: eng (English)
Distribution: World     (downloadable)
Keywords: CIRF; CRASSH; Liberty Barnes;
Explicit content: No
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Screencast: No
Bumper: UCS Default
Trailer: UCS Default
 
Abstract: Infertile men are conspicuously absent from IVF clinics, social science research and public discourse on infertility in the United States. In order to track down infertile men and investigate the relationship between men’s fertility status and masculinity, sociologist Liberty Walther Barnes shadowed male infertility medical doctors in the U.S. and interviewed their patients. While all twenty-four of the patients interviewed fit the clinical definition of infertility, fully two-thirds of them did not self identify as infertile. In this presentation, Dr. Barnes argues that infertile men are powerful players in the social constructions of disease and gender and that their resistance to the “infertile” label explains, in part, the invisibility of male infertility. Men employ a variety of strategies to reconceptualize their inability to conceive in terms that feel less threatening to their personal sense of masculinity. These include: focusing on the etiology of their infertility, referring to their inability to conceive as “just a medical condition,” over-emphasizing any positive aspects of their fertility status, characterizing infertility as a minor symptom of a more complex health issue, or outright denying the diagnosis and its association with masculinity. Dr. Barnes concludes that the social processes of constructing disease and gender are inextricably intertwined in the case of male infertility.
Available Formats
Format Quality Bitrate Size
MPEG-4 Video 640x360    1.91 Mbits/sec 437.93 MB View Download
WebM 640x360    739.42 kbits/sec 165.18 MB View Download
iPod Video 480x270    494.63 kbits/sec 110.44 MB View Download
MP3 44100 Hz 249.76 kbits/sec 55.83 MB Listen Download
Auto * (Allows browser to choose a format it supports)