Datum
17. Juni 2026
Hybrid Book Launch
Anna Molas: „Taming Egg Donors: The Egg Donation Reproductive Market in Spain” (Book Launch)
17th of June 2026
18.30h CEST online and in person in Barcelona
The presentation will be followed by a conversation with Laura Perler (University of Bern) and Chandra Kala Clemente-Martínez (Chair of the Catalan Association of Adoptees). Chris Newfield, ISRF Director of Research, will moderate the Q&A.
Link to register: Book Launch “Taming Egg Donors”
About the book:
Spain has become one of the most prominent fertility markets in the world, largely fuelled by the availability of human eggs. Behind the promise of cutting-edge technology and parenthood lies a carefully tailored system to recruit, manage, and discipline egg donors. In this book, Anna Molas explores how young women are incorporated as egg donors into the global reproductive industry. Through in-depth ethnographic fieldwork with both donors and clinicians, the book reveals the fragile processes of selection, monitoring, and control that ensure the supply of human eggs. Introducing the concept of taming, Molas illuminates the gendered, racialized, and classed dimensions of reproductive labor. Engaging with the political economy of reproduction and the future of reproductive medicine, this book is an essential resource for scholars in medical anthropology, Science and Technology Studies, and feminist studies.
Reviews:
“This meticulously researched and argued account of how egg donors in Spain are inducted into the global repro-market makes a crucial intervention into the now extensive sociological work on reproductive labour, entrepreneurism and stratification. A brilliant contribution to political economy as well as reproductive studies, it is also a masterfully conducted study with far-reaching implications for practitioners as well as the social sciences.”
Sarah Franklin, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Cambridge
“Enter a world of unpredictable bodies, painful injections and pressured extractions. Molas renders the hidden work and agency of young women egg donors visible in this important ethnography of the positional relations between donors and clinics in the world’s largest egg donation industry in Spain. In this superb book, she theorises how participating in reproductive provision depends upon, produces and capitalizes on vulnerabilities and how young women become opportunistic entrepreneurs of their reproductive potentials.”
Andrea Whittaker, FASSA, Professor at the School of Social Sciences, Monash University
“Anna Molas‘ brilliant study both contributes to our understanding of a key site in the global system of egg provision – Spain – and brings a remarkable fresh perspective to the reproductive work involved. By focusing on the formation of collaborative and contested relationships between clinicians and egg providers, the book examines the power relationships that allow clinics to combine care with control, and reliably disentangle women from their eggs. Drawing on the conceptual possibilities of ‘taming’, Molas gives us new ways to analyse the intimate labour at the heart of the fertility industry.”
Catherine Waldby, FASSA, Professor at the Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University
“This unique study presents a deeply researched ethnography of Spain’s egg donation economy. Molas maps out the market logics and disciplinary techniques, always gendered, racialised, and classed, through which bodies are tamed for inclusion in bioeconomic circuits of valorisation, surveillance, and extraction. Foregrounding the voices of participants, both donors and clinicians, Molas skilfully demystifies the power dynamics obscured by reductive discourses of ‘donation’ or ‘charity’. This is required reading for scholars and practitioners alike.”
Dr Lars Cornelissen, Academic Editor, Independent Social Research Foundation, London, UK
“Taming Egg Donors offers a comprehensive account of how women in Spain come to the decision to donate their eggs. By using the concept of taming to analyze the experiences of egg donors, Molas shows how the labor involved in making eggs available for the global bio-market reinforces existing inequalities. This is a rich and thoughtful study that makes an important intervention in the scholarship on reproductive labor.”
Daisy Deomampo, Associate Professor, Fordham University