The visual imaging technologies in pregnancy have been used to project the fetus into the public eye. An explanation of the public image of the fetus is given in Janelle Taylor’s book “Public Life of the Fetal Sonogram” in which she uses the example of a specific advertisement created by the DeMoss Foundation to demonstrate the fetishization of the public fetus. In this advertisement there is a video of a baby side by side with a video of a fetal sonogram with the tagline “Life. What a Beautiful Choice.” The purpose of these images was to promote an anti-abortion agenda. Taylor writes that the act of taking this fetal image out of its context and “the clinical medical setting,...commodified this particular fetus, fetishized it, and cast it in the role of “public” fetus” (2008, 48). In this instance visual imaging technologies in pregnancy are being used to make the fetus an icon, or a symbol of the fetus’ potential to become a child. By placing this image into the public it becomes an object with values as a part of society. “It is the “public fetus” as moral abstraction they are being made to view” (Petchesky 1987, 281). This widespread, singular idea of the fetus equaling a child would only be possible through sonograms and recording technology. The commodification of the fetishized fetal image becomes public through the standardization of visual imaging technologies in
The visual imaging technologies in pregnancy have been used to project the fetus into the public eye. An explanation of the public image of the fetus is given in Janelle Taylor’s book “Public Life of the Fetal Sonogram” in which she uses the example of a specific advertisement created by the DeMoss Foundation to demonstrate the fetishization of the public fetus. In this advertisement there is a video of a baby side by side with a video of a fetal sonogram with the tagline “Life. What a Beautiful Choice.” The purpose of these images was to promote an anti-abortion agenda. Taylor writes that the act of taking this fetal image out of its context and “the clinical medical setting,...commodified this particular fetus, fetishized it, and cast it in the role of “public” fetus” (2008, 48). In this instance visual imaging technologies in pregnancy are being used to make the fetus an icon, or a symbol of the fetus’ potential to become a child. By placing this image into the public it becomes an object with values as a part of society. “It is the “public fetus” as moral abstraction they are being made to view” (Petchesky 1987, 281). This widespread, singular idea of the fetus equaling a child would only be possible through sonograms and recording technology. The commodification of the fetishized fetal image becomes public through the standardization of visual imaging technologies in