Author Archives: Anna Wood

I’m a PhD student in Sociocultural Anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. My research draws from medical anthropology, science & technology studies, and gender & sexuality studies to explore how women’s health technologies are shaped, experienced and embodied.
A black-and-white photograph of a white woman in her twenties or thirties. She is gazing directly at the camera and holding up an alarm clock with a pill tray attached to the top, allowing for reminders to take birth control. In her other hand, which has a ring, she is holding a single pill.

(Seed) Cycling Toward a Crossroads: Menstrual Positivity and Hormone Practices Under Right-Wing Regimes

Over the past several years, menstrual and hormonal cycles have gained significant public attention across the US and Europe, concurrent with growing skepticism towards biomedicine and an idealization of the natural. From widespread rejection of hormonal contraceptives in favor cycle-based fertility tracking, to satirical social media trends around hormonal cycles, discourses around menstruation reflect a broader zeitgeist around naturopathic wellness. A constellation of women’s health advocates, right-wing influencers, and lay experts have helped to proliferate negative information around hormonal contraceptives, including testimonials about side effects and doubts about their safety. This has unfolded alongside a renewed embrace of non-pharmaceutically suppressed menstruation. (read more...)