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Seminal

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The complexities and controversies at the nexus of sperm, health, and politicsIn Seminal, experts from across the social sciences, humanities, law, and medicine offer a kaleidoscopic view of the re...
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  • 24 June 2025
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The complexities and controversies at the nexus of sperm, health, and politics

In Seminal, experts from across the social sciences, humanities, law, and medicine offer a kaleidoscopic view of the relationship between sperm, health, and the intersecting politics of gender, race, and reproduction. Always insightful and often provocative, the essays in this unprecedented collection cover a broad range of issues related to male reproductive and sexual health—including the latest technological developments for creating sperm; the specter of eugenics in contemporary medical markets; emerging approaches to male contraceptive methods, male infertility, and trans healthcare; controversies surrounding sperm donors and sperm banking; disparities in sexual health education for teens—all the while attending to the enormous variation in how individuals and societies understand, embody, and experience sperm.

At a time when the most basic rights of reproductive autonomy are under severe threat, contributors to this volume argue this is precisely the moment to rethink and reimagine sperm from a variety of medical, political, and cultural perspectives. Ultimately, this volume aims to contribute to a more reproductively just society and broaden conversations around bodies, health and equity in the United States.

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Price: $89.00
Pages: 360
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Series: Health, Society, and Inequality
Publication Date: 24 June 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781479834068
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Men's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Disease & Health Issues, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies
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"As this collection of 30 scholarly (but easy-to-read) short essays … carefully makes clear, male reproductive cells have immense social, legal, ethical, and public-health significance."

"Seminal brilliantly offers sperm as a microcosm for the storm of issues, both biological and social, provoked by the ascendance of the idea of a crisis in masculinities. With gametic and contraceptive politics surging, there is no better introduction to the intersection of sex, gender, reproduction, biology, and health than this timely and accessible collection."

"This unique edited volume brings together a strikingly diverse set of experts who collectively cast doubt on many received wisdoms about sperm, masculinity, and the biological and cultural aspects of gender, sexuality, reproduction, and health. The remarkably wide array of topics will make this a go-to volume for many readers interested in different aspects of sperm, health, and politics."

"By exploring such topics such as fertility, contraception, and sexuality, Seminal considers the biological and social aspects of how sperm is used, made, counted, regulated, and sometimes commodified. These themes are viewed through the lens of reproductive justice and health care inequities. Seminal is an important and timely contribution that reminds us that behind every sperm is an individual with a certain positionality in society."

"This collection of 30 short essays addresses causes of low sperm viability, male contraception, home sperm tests, sperm donation, masculinity, and the psychological impact of infertility."
Rene Almeling (Editor)
Rene Almeling is Professor of Sociology at Yale University. She is the award-winning author of GUYnecology: The Missing Science of Men’s Reproductive Health and Sex Cells: The Medical Market for Eggs and Sperm.

Lisa Campo-Engelstein (Editor)
Lisa Campo-Engelstein is Professor and Chair of Bioethics & Health Humanities at the University of Texas Medical Branch.

Brian T. Nguyen (Editor)
Brian T. Nguyen is Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics & Gynecology at the University of Southern California, where he is also Program Director for the Fellowship in Complex Family Planning.