Sophie Lewis Read Bio Collapse
Sophie Lewis is writer, speaker, teacher, and recovering academic. She is the author of Full Surrogacy Now: Feminism Against Family (Verso, 2019) and Abolish the Family: A Manifesto for Care and Liberation (Verso, 2022). Forthcoming in 2025 is Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation (Haymarket). She teaches courses at the Brooklyn Institute for Social Reseach and is a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Research in Feminist, Queer, and Transgender Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
You or I, in other words, singly or as a collective, might at some point or another be called to doula the inaugural emergence, or terminal shutdown, of someone’s body. You never know when an extra hand might be required on the occasion of someone’s expulsion of a fetus (dead or living) from their uterus. You never know when your simple watchful presence might be called for because someone is dying and because, without you there, they would be utterly alone. As Madeline Lane-McKinley says, “if we must mother our friends, let us all be mothered.”
“The everyday “miracle” that transpires in pregnancy, the production of that number more than one and less than two, receives more idealizing lip-service than it does respect. Certainly, the creation of new proto-personhood in the uterus is a marvel artists have engaged for millennia (and psychoanalytic philosophers for almost a century). Most of us need no reminding that we are, each of us, the blinking, thinking, pulsating products of gestational work and its equally laborious aftermaths. Yet in 2017 a reader and thinker as compendious as Maggie Nelson can still state, semi-incredulously but with a strong case behind her, that philosophical writing about actually doing gestation constitutes an absence in culture.
Julia Mallory
Gema Darbo and Deniz Kirkali
Megan Hines
Editors