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megan crowley-matoka
Familial Sacrifice and
National Aspiration in Mexico
Domesticating Organ Transplant
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D O M E S T I C AT I N G O R G A N T R A N S P L A N T
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Domesticating Organ Transplant
F A M I L I A L S A C R I F I C E
A N D
N A T I O N A L A S P I R A T I O N
I N M E X I C O
M E G A N C R O W L E Y - M A T O K A
Duke University Press Durham and London 2016
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© 2016 Duke University Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States o America on acid-ree paper ∞
Typeset in Quadraat Pro by Westchester Book Group
Library o Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Crowley-Matoka, Megan, [date] author.
Domesticating organ transplant : amilial sacrice and national
aspiration in Mexico / Megan Crowley-Matoka.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical reerences and index.
978-0-8223-6052-0 (hardcover : alk. paper)
978-0-8223-6067-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) 978-0-8223-7463-3 (e-book)
1. Kidneys—Transplantation—Mexico. 2. Organ donors—Mexico.
3. Transplantation o organs, tissues, etc.—Social aspects—Mexico.
4. Transplantation o organs, tissues, etc.—Moral and
ethical aspects. . Title.
.
617.4′610592—dc23
2015031550
Cover art: Collage by Martyn Schmoll; heart photo © Eduard
Lysenko, istock; locket photo © juicybits, istock.
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For my father, James Swenney Crowley
And my mentor, Arthur J. Rubel
Their lively intellects and love of debate are dearly missed
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Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
PART I . G IV ING K IDNEYS (OR NOT)
1. Living Organ Donation, Bioavailability,
and Ethical Domesticity 33
2. Cadaveric Organ Donation,
Biounavailability, and Slippery States 65
PART I I . GETTING K IDNEYS (OR NOT)
3. Being Worthy of Transplant,
Embodying Transplant’s Worth 109
4. The Unsung Story of Posttransplant Life 147
PART I I I . FRAMING TRANSPLANTATION
5. Gifts, Commodities, and Analytic Icons
in the Anthropological Lives of Organs 187
6. Scientists, Saints, and Monsters
in Transplant Medicine 225
Coda 261
Notes 267 | References 285 | Index 307
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Acknowledgments
First and oremost, there are not words suffi cient to express my gratitude to
the patients, amily members, and transplant proessionals in Mexico who
so graciously let me into their lives and shared so generously o their time,
energy, space, ideas, joys, rustrations, hopes, doubts, and everyday habits.
The most astonishing and deeply moving thing about anthropology is that
people allow us to do it, and I eel prooundly privileged to have been al-
lowed to do it in this place with these particular people. Although their indi-
vidual names do not appear here or reasons o condentiality, their stories
and words are the lieblood o this book. I hope I have done them justice.
My entrée into the transplant community in Guadalajara, as well as my
efforts to make sense o that world, were prooundly enabled by Dr. Javier
García de Alba García at the Unidad de Investigación Social, Económica y
en Servicios de Salud, along with his colleagues Ana Leticia Salceda-Rocha,
Juan Antonio González Barrera, Evangélina Herrera Solís, and María Faus-
tina Campos-Arciniega. With great generosity and good humor, they pro-
vided me with an institutional home and a lively intellectual community,
as well as guidance both sensitive and candid in navigating the scholarly,
political, and personal challenges o eldwork in Mexico. Through their
riendship and the many adventures (culinary, literary, musical, matrimo-
nial, and otherwise) into which they invited me, I came to experience Gua-
dalajara in a way that would not have otherwise been possible. In addition, the
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Bontield amily with whom I lived throughout the course o my eldwork
sustained and enriched this work immeasurably by so warmly enolding
me into their amily. I cannot even imagine navigating the emotional terrain
o this eldwork without Doña Tere’s incredible cooking, the soul-restoring
pleasure o playing with the amily’s beautiul babies afer long and ofengrim days spent in the hospitals, and the joyous chaos o long Sunday
afernoons lled with amily o all ages, barbacoa, music, tequilítos, and fútbol.
Long beore I got to Mexico (and long afer I lef) this project was sup-
ported and shaped by more people than I can ever hope to do justice to
here. First thanks must go to my advisor, the late Art Rubel, whose wisdom
and guidance in matters theoretical, ethnographic, and practical nurtured
the course o this work and my own development as an anthropologist.
The abiding curiosity and deep generosity o his intellect made him one othose rare mentors who are able to both demand rigor and encourage ree-
dom o thought in equal measure. It has also been an enormous privilege
to have Margaret Lock bring the depth o her insight and the warmth o
her riendship to bear on this project as it has grown rom the tentative
kernel o a graduate student’s idea to a nished book. Her own brilliant
work provided early and enduring inspiration or the ascinating and useul
things one might be able to do with anthropology, and I eel outrageously
ortunate to have shared ideas, laughter, and good meals with her over the
years. I would also like to thank Bill Maurer, whose inspired teaching led
me to my rst exploration into the world o organ transplantation, and
whose intellectual spirit and sense o serious play is utterly ingrained in
the beginnings o this project. Jim Ferguson also had an important guid-
ing hand in the early development o this work, and I remain indebted
to and admiring o his precision o thought and language. In the begin-
ning stages o this manuscript, Susan Greenhalgh was the kind o reader
one scarcely dares hope or, with an uncanny ability to attend to issues o
theory, politics, logic, organization, and aesthetics simultaneously and
with a razor- sharp eye.
In making its circuitous way rom dissertation to book, this project
beneted immeasurably rom support o all kinds rom many different
sources. The eldwork itsel was enabled by unding rom the Fulbright
Fellowship Program, the National Science Foundation, the Social Science
Research Council, and the program. Preliminary write-up was
supported by a University o Caliornia Regents Dissertation Writing Fel-
lowship. During the lonely work o dissertation writing, Patty Marshall
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and Elisa Gordon, both then at Loyola University Chicago, offered much-
needed anthropological ellowship that kept me going as I toiled ar rom
my home graduate program. A postdoctoral ellowship and a later visiting
aculty appointment with the MacLean Center or Clinical Medical Ethics
at the University o Chicago provided invaluable time or thinking and writ-ing, as well as an abiding network o intellectual comradeship upon which
I still depend. From that network, ongoing engagement with Mark Siegler,
David Cronin, and Lainie Ross in particular have continued to hone my
thinking and interest in transplantation, while Debjani Mukherjee and the
late Melinda Gordon became cherished riends on the academic road. My
time at the University o Chicago was also greatly enriched by the warm sup-
port offered by Jean Comaroff, whose sponsorship o a Visiting Research
Scholar position with the Anthropology Department helped to ensure thatI did not become too lost among the doctors while training in bioethics.
My rst aculty position at the University o Pittsburgh and the
Center or Health Equity Research and Promotion provided vital intellec-
tual and institutional support during what became a drawn-out phase o
manuscript revision, as I learned to nd my way in the world o academic
medicine while striving to keep at least one oot rmly in anthropology. I
cannot imagine having been able to do so without the keen intellect and
unstinting support o Bob Arnold, who throughout my time in Pittsburgh
and ever since has been the kind o mentor with whom it is just a joy to
work. Wickedly smart, irreverent, and deeply kind, thinking with him has
been not just productive but awully good un as this project has wound its
way toward an end o which he never let me lose sight. Pittsburgh was a
marvelous and storied place in which to think about organ transplantation,
given its place in the history o the eld, and I beneted greatly rom my en-
gagements with the rich community o multidisciplinary scholars and cli-
nicians engaged in transplant work there, particularly Galen Switzer, John
Fung, Mary Amanda Dew, Andrea DiMartini, Larissa Myaskovsky, Henkie
Tan, Ron Shapiro, and Mark Unruh. In anthropology, Nicole Constable and
especially my dear riend Gabi Lukacs provided much-needed connection
to my home discipline.
My time in Pittsburgh was also marked by becoming a mother, and I had
the incredible good ortune to be surrounded by a group o whip-smart,
accomplished, and unsparingly rank, unny women colleagues who were
doing the same, particularly Judy Chang, Winnie Teuteberg, Amber Barnato,
Molly Conroy, Cindy Bryce, and Kelly Hyman. Their companionship made
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guring out the new balancing act o our lives and work both more possible
and a great deal more un.
My current colleagues in Medical Humanities and Bioethics at North-
western University make up the most engaging, nurturing, and challenging
academic home I could wish or—I don’t know how I got so lucky. Katie Watson and Debjani Mukherjee accompanied every single step o the nal
round o rethinking and rewriting the manuscript in our wonderul writ-
ing group, doing so with just the right combination o uninching, spot-on
critique and unwavering enthusiasm. Kathryn Montgomery and Catherine
Belling provided insightul, generous readings o the whole manuscript at
the crucial nal stages, and to have the eyes o such clear thinkers and ne
writers on my work was truly a gif. Tod Chambers and Alice Dreger have
been wise, savvy, and sometimes savagely unny sounding boards or titleideas and much else about the book writing process. Other members o
our community, especially John Franklin, Sarah Rodriguez, Bryan
Morrison, and Myria Knox, as well as our inspiringly committed graduate
students have been crucial in creating what is the special alchemy o this
place. The wonderully collegial Department o Anthropology has provided
me with a welcoming second home at Northwestern, or which I thank our
chair, Bill Leonard, in particular. My attachment to the department and my
work on the nal version o this book have been immeasurably deepened by
Rebecca Seligman, who went chapter-or-chapter with me in an intensive
writing partnership as we nished our manuscripts together. Without her
incisive comments, careul eye or argument, and motivating companion-
ship, it is hard to imagine where this book would now be.
I have been so ortunate that my array o anthropological interlocutors
and dear riends keeps expanding, rom graduate school Christina Schwen-
kel, Jennier Heung, Selim Shahine, Kimberley Coles, and Tom Douglas
remain treasured ellow-travelers, and since then I have been particularly
lucky to work and think with Elizabeth Roberts, Sherine Hamdy, Gala True,
Harris Solomon, Sharon Kauman, Lawrence Cohen, Ciara Kierans, and
Betsey Brada along the way. More specically, different versions o this
work have beneted greatly rom the insight o many generous reviewers,
both ormal and inormal. In particular, three brilliant, engaged, and enor-
mously patient reviewers or Duke University Press provided theoretically
challenging and rigorously thoughtul reviews over an extended time pe-
riod that prooundly shaped the nal manuscript—I am able here to thank
Lesley Sharp and Emily Wentzell directly. Without all three reviewers, this
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would have been a very different and surely a ar weaker book, and I am
grateul to Ken Wissoker at Duke not only or his wise guidance and unag-
ging support or this protracted project, but or nding me such construc-
tive and meticulous readers. Elizabeth Ault at Duke has also been crucial in
helping to navigate the review and revision and production process, and Iremain in awe o her skills at navigating the bureaucratic world o cultural
patrimony permissions in Mexico—this book has been prooundly agilizado
by her efforts in particular, as well as by those o her skilled colleagues in
production and marketing at Duke, in particular, Susan Albury. In addition,
Donald Joralemon, Luis Alberto Vargas, and Alan Harwood all provided
insightul and critically helpul reviews o an earlier version o the manu-
script, and generous early readings by Valentina Napolitano and Lynn Mor-
gan also provided trenchant comments and additional ood or thought.Feedback rom Carole Browner, Betty Wolder-Levin, and two anonymous
reviewers or Social Science and Medicine on an earlier version o chapter 4
helped to ocus and tighten that analysis in critical ways. In addition, pre-
sentations o portions o this material to audiences at the University o Cali-
ornia, Irvine; the University o Chicago; the University o Illinois, Chicago;
the University o Pittsburgh; Northwestern University; the University o
Pennsylvania; Brown University; and various annual meetings o the Ameri-
can Anthropological Association, the Society or Medical Anthropology,
and the American Society or Bioethics and Humanities all generated lively
discussion and thought-provoking insight or grappling with this material.
Finally, and most undamentally, I am so very thankul or my amily,
who has supported me throughout this long process with such enthusi-
asm, grace, and good humor. Having been raised by my parents, James
and Margaret Crowley, to love books deeply, it is a particular pleasure to
have produced one o my own. And while I wish my ather were still alive
to read it, I am grateul to have had my mother—an astute reader and a
beautiul writer in her own right—as such an engaged companion along
the way. From visiting me in the eld to reading a seemingly endless stream
o chapter drafs, she must surely eel as i this book is partly hers as well.
My husband, Derek Matoka, has been on this ride with me rom the very
beginning, celebrating my admission to graduate school despite the three-
thousand-mile separation it required, spending his med school vacations
visiting the Mexican hospitals that were my eld sites, creating time and
space or my writing over many years, and accompanying me in this long,
strange journey into the world o medicine in which we are both, in our
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own ways, engaged. He not only sustains and continues to challenge me,
but has given me our two splendid daughters, Kathryn and Ellie, who over
the course o this project have grown old enough to all in love with books
themselves and have helped to alternately harangue and hearten me
on through the nal stages o nishing this one. They are, as they know,my deepest joy.
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Introduction
During my rst eldwork visit to Mexico I ound mysel encountering the
same striking story again and again, a story centered on a young boy in kid-
ney ailure, the son o a Mexican ather and a German mother. Initially diag-
nosed in the city o Guadalajara, the boy was then taken by his (relatively a-
uent) parents to Germany or additional consultations. In both places they
were told that a kidney transplant was the best hope or their son. In Mexico,
a living donor transplant was all that was offered, given the local scarcity o
organs obtained rom brain-dead (or cadaveric) donors. In Germany, how-
ever, physicians strongly advised a cadaveric transplant—a recommendation
based, in part, on an aversion to the instrumental use o living bodies in the
long afermath o the Nazi era (Hogle 1999). Afer much consideration, the
German mother decided to give a kidney to her increasingly ill son, moti-
vated by the somewhat higher success rates with living donor transplants
over cadaveric ones. Once so decided, went the story, German physicians
advised the couple to return to Mexico, deerring to the greater experience
and expertise o their Mexican transplant colleagues with living donation.
The mother’s German natal amily, by all reports, was horried and an-
gered by her decision, and vehemently opposed the donation. It seemed
inconceivable to them that she would risk hersel when another option ex-
isted. The mother, however, determined to do everything possible or her
son, rejected their pleas that she reconsider. The amily returned to Mexico
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where the donation and transplant were carried out successully in a private
hospital in Guadalajara.
This was a story that seemed nearly ubiquitous during that rst eld visit
to Guadalajara, offered up in turn by many o the various transplant sur-
geons, nephrologists, nurses, and transplant coordinators I was making therounds to meet in the several institutions where transplantation took place
across the city. In each telling, it was almost invariably emphasized that the
mother’s decision to donate reected the act that she had become “más mexi-
cana” (more Mexican) through her willingness to potentially sacrice hersel
in order to save her son. Her German amily’s horror at her decision, in con-
trast, was used in the storytelling to exempliy a colder, more individualis-
tic ethos. The key reading being offered here indexed a particular valence
o national identity and pride, one that highlighted—and celebrated—aniconic vision o the sel-sacricial Mexican mother. For my interlocutors
this was clearly not just a story about motherhood, but one about nation-
hood as well. That is, it was a story that reversed typical modernist narra-
tives in which the technology and skill o the putative rst world are always
superior. It was a story in which what we might call the cultural technology o
the Mexican amily (and o that sel-sacricial mother in particular) was
imagined as a resource that has enabled Mexico to develop its own kinds
o expertise, its own orms o superiority both technical and moral. For the
anthropologist, it was a story that orced me to think rom the very begin-
nings o this project about the bodies o mothers, about the pull o suffering
and the calculation o risk within amilies, and about the ashioning o both
individual and national identity as they emerge and converge in the context
o transplantation.
Both the content and the insistent recurrence o the story remained with
me, and I have ound mysel returning to contemplate it again and again
since those exhilarating, ofen bewildering early days o eldwork. Over
time, the story has come or me to both situate and condense many o the
central concerns o this book. The tale o the German mother highlights the
degree to which transplantation is a deeply cultural and biopolitical enter-
prise. An enterprise, that is, that both reveals and enacts situated notions
o who can and should risk their bodies through organ donation, as well
as who can and should benet rom that risk. Afer all, it is striking that
it was the mother’s—never the ather’s—body over which those debates
about donation took place. Equally striking is the way that ideas about the
desirability o living versus dead organ donors, as well as what constitutes
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acceptable risk and worthwhile gain, shif as the amily moves between the
Mexican and German contexts. Clearly neither the clinical practices nor
the biopolitics o transplant are everywhere the same (Crowley-Matoka
and Lock 2006). And indeed, it was precisely those differences that were
so defly leveraged in the ser vice o national identity in the proud, repeti-tive recounting o the story that I encountered during those early days
in the eld. Moreover, such issues o national identity surace not only in
the content o the story, but in the context o its telling as well. Perhaps
it should not be surprising that so many o those transplant proession-
als shared a common impulse to be sure that one o the rst stories this
gringa anthropologist heard was not one that conjured “developing world”
tropes o inadequate resources and incomplete expertise. Instead, this
was a story that deliberately touted cultural, technological, and even ethi-cal triumph through the medium o transplantation.
Attending to the striking repetition o this story during my rst eld en-
counters seems telling in another way as well. For this insistent recounting
seems to suggest a certain symbolic, representational power at work here, a
way in which this particular story useully captured and succinctly communi-
cated something my interlocutors wanted to be sure that I grasped. Indeed,
the emblematic nature o the story o the German mother who became más
mexicana—emblematic both or those telling the story, and or me in hear-
ing and continuing to ponder it—embodies another central concern o this
book. That is, it crystallizes a concern with the way in which organ trans-
plantation is so ofen made to stand or something—or or many things—
larger than itsel. And so, taking a cue rom that recurrent, resonant gure
o the German mother, in this book I am interested also in exploring how
organ transplantation serves—more broadly and across a range o different
registers—as a kind o icon.
In one register, organ transplantation clearly stands as icon or the won-
ders o science, as well as or its dangers. Lesley Sharp, or example, has de-
scribed transplantation as an “icon o medical achievement,” in which the
considerable powers o biomedicine to repair ailing bodies and dey death
are dramatically maniest (Sharp 2006: 1). Not always triumphal, however,
transplant has also requently played a more sinister role in the scientic
imaginary, serving as iconic o the processes o bodily commodication
and neoliberal exploitation made visible in what Nancy Scheper-Hughes has
so vividly termed the “neo-cannibalism” o global organ traffi cking (1998a:
14). In another register, the ability to wield transplantation ofen gures
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as an icon o national progress and pride; this is much the way it is made
to work in that story o the German mother who becomes más mexicana.
Yet transplantation— when it is perceived to go awry—has also ofen stood
as emblematic o developmental ailure and even national shame, as in
the global media renzy over India’s black market “organs bazaar” (Cohen1999; Das 2000). And within anthropology itsel, organ transplantation has
become iconic o a certain set o theoretically central and ofen politically
charged divides between nature and culture, sel and other, lie and death,
gif and commodity, science and spirituality (see Ikels 2013 or a recent
overview o the burgeoning anthropology o transplant).
In each o these registers it is intriguing to ask, why does transplant
seem so readily to condense and capture a core set o meanings about bio-
medicine, about national identity, and even about anthropological theory?To draw on Claude Levi-Strauss’s amous ormulation, why are organ
transplants not just so good to think (with), but so good to symbolize with
(Lévi-Strauss 1962)? And urther, what might be the localized, material
effects o being pressed into such symbolic ser vice or how organ trans-
plantation is enacted and experienced—as well as or how it is analyzed?
Such questions o iconicity resonate with Judith Butler’s notion o coming
to matter as a process o acquiring both materiality and importance through
repetitive acts o meaning-making (Butler 1993). Indeed, we might think
o those eager tellings and retellings o the story o the German mother in
just this way, providing initial insight into how transplantation has come to
matter in Mexico both through the materiality o living donor bodies and
as a sign o national identity and pride. Taking transplant as a kind o icon
helps to illuminate these processes o signication and materialization, o-
cusing our attention on how organ transplantation operates as both an idea
and a practice.
I take up the notion o the icon advisedly here, aware that the term has a
rich and varied history o usage, rom its most prosaic employment as sim-
ply a kind o symbolization, to its precise deployment in semiotic analyses
as a orm o representation specically based on likeness and similarity,
to its religious meaning as an artistic representation o a sacred Christian
gure. Mindul o this range o meanings, I nd that each o these incar-
nations o the notion o the icon lends a useul analytic—and sometimes
affective—dimension to the way I use the term throughout this book. In
exploring the representational resonance that organ transplantation seems
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5
to bear, it will be critical to ask a set o semiotics-inspired questions about
what key eatures, what specic orms o likeness are oregrounded when
transplant is made to stand in or biomedical achievement, or national as-
pirations, or or particular kinds o anthropological problems (Mertz 2007;
Peirce 1974). Equally important will be the question o what gets lost insuch oregroundings—that is, what complexities are elided in the simpli-
ying processes o symbolization? Beyond this, the religious orm o the
icon useully evokes a sense o both the sacred and the proane, as the er-
vent devotion that icons inspire is so ofen tempered by ears about their
tendency to become a orm o alse god (Vrame 2003). Such moral duality,
such a simultaneous sense o both the miraculous and the potentially cor-
rupt, is aptly attuned to the complex ways in which transplantation is both
enshrined as a pinnacle o biomedical (and sometimes national) achieve-ment and persistently haunted by intimations o proteering, criminality,
and butchery.
As Lynn Morgan has pointed out in her recent work on the gure o the
etus as icon in American culture, the most powerul icons are ofen the
most polysemic ones, those which can be read to divergent effect by differ-
ent constituencies (Morgan 2009; see also Nelkin and Lindee 1996; Taylor
2008; Verdery 1999). In such readings and counterreadings icons are ren-
dered not just representational but deeply political, a site o both assertion
and contestation. An analysis o the iconic thus requires remaining alert
to the particular stories o the way things stand being put orward in such
condensed representations, as well as to the other sorts o possible sto-
ries they work to quell. Listening careully or both the stories voiced and
the stories silenced in iconic renderings o transplant is an approach that
borrows also rom Homi Bhabha’s insight into stereotypes as a “complex,
ambivalent, contradictory orm o representation, as anxious as they are as-
sertive” (Bhabha 1994: 70). And in retaining a eel or the exertion as well as
the anxieties o power at work in symbolizing processes I draw too W. J. T.
Mitchell’s ruminations on representation. For Mitchell, the icon as a orm
o representation is never (just) an object but is always an act, a process,
that is at once aesthetic and political (Mitchell 1986).
Exploring the polysemy o transplant as icon in the pages to come re-
quires attending to what transplant is held to symbolize: what are the par-
ticular images, gures, objects, ideas that are made to emerge out o and
stand in or the diverse network o practices, actors, and orms o relation
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6
that constitute transplantation? How do the particular aesthetics and his-
tories o those images and gures matter? What are the interests, values,
constituencies, and hierarchies that are served—or undermined—in the
process? These are the questions that the notion o organ transplantation
as icon serves to oreground. I take these questions to the ethnographicground o Mexico—a place where transplant is dependent on living kidney
donors and inormed by a rich religious and political iconography o bodily
sacrice. In doing so, the chapters that ollow explore how transplant gets
caught up in particular ways o imagining and enacting both individual and
national selves—and how such imaginings, in turn, materialize transplan-
tation in locally specic ways.
More broadly, ocusing on iconicity provides a useul angle o inquiry
into a range o issues—conceptual, political, and ethical—that emerge atthe intersections o embodied experience, subjectivity, medical practice,
and state power. Moving organs rom one body into another inescapably
poses a set o thorny questions with reach beyond the boundaries o trans-
plantation itsel, questions o the relation between sel and other, o the
biotechnical possibilities or human connection and exploitation, and o
the rights and responsibilities we have both in our own bodies and to the
bodies o others. Locally specic arrangements governing rom whom or-
gans come and to whom they go—as well as who gets to decide and who
gets to prot—are consequential at the level o individual, lived bodies as
well as or how the wider social body operates as both symbol and site o
governance (Scheper-Hughes and Lock 1987). The transplant endeavor is
literally dependent on making some bodies give up organs in order to pro-
vide treatment or others, thus providing a starkly immediate and material
example o how ailing physical bodies and the larger sociopolitical body
pull upon and shape one another. In tracking how transplant, as an iconic
orm o medicine, has come through particular kinds o meaning into par-
ticular kinds o being, I am inormed by the long trajectory o scholarship
that has illuminated the body as a potent site and source o social mean-
ing (see, among many examples, Douglas 1966, 1970; Foucault 1963, 1976;
Haraway 1991; Lindenbaum and Lock 1993). Understanding the body as
a undamentally contested terrain, constituted by ever-shifing relations
between power, knowledge, and practice, I take organ transplantation as
an analytic site where those contestations are rendered unusually, use-
ully visible.
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7
Technology Out of Place?
Organ transplantation in Mexico—interesting . . . So you’re studying black mar-
ket stuff, organ selling, that kind o thing?
—Anthropology colleague, United States
It has been a common initial response to my research, an assumption
elded time and again rom academic colleagues and nonacademic riends
and amily in the United States. I ound the response rst amusing, then
irritating, and then—as it became utterly predictable—intriguing in the
regularity with which so many assumed that research on transplantation in
Mexico must involve the illegal, must invoke a story o transplant gone awry
in some dangerous and disordered way. Engaging what Stuart Youngner hascalled the “dark side” o transplant’s iconic image (1990), such assump-
tions were surely ueled in part by inuential work on the global organ trade
by anthropologists Lawrence Cohen, Nancy Scheper-Hughes, and others
(e.g., Cohen 1999, 2002, 2005; Moniruzzaman 2012; Scheper-Hughes 2000,
2002a, 2002b, 2004, 2005). Recurrent and unsettling stories in the popu-
lar media about organ sales and organ thef also surely colored such reac-
tions (e.g., Finkel 2001; Rothman and Rothman 2003; Sack 2014; Schemo
1994). But Mexico, notably, has never eatured centrally in either academic
or more popularized versions o such accounts. Indeed, this explanation
seems insuffi cient to explain the pervasiveness o this assumption that
organ transplantation in Mexico must not work in the expected and re-
spectable ways. The implicit subtext here, o course, is that transplantation
in the developed, postindustrial world does work in ways (at least reason-
ably) proper and just. Mention o cross-cultural research on organ trans-
plantation in Japan and Germany (Hogle 1999; Lock 2001), or instance,
typically elicited expectations o cultural difference, but not this knee- jerk
assumption o illegality and exploitation.
We might think o the underlying logic here in terms borrowed rom
Mary Douglas’s amous ormulation o dirt as “matter out o place” (Doug-
las 1966: 36): in an almost automatic sort o way transplantation in Mexico
seemed to strike many o my U.S. interlocutors as technology out of place. This
borrowing seems helpul or capturing how transplantation in Mexico
was thought (by some) to transgress the boundaries o an implicit global
hierarchy, violating the imagined geographies and chronologies o a
developed versus developing world divide. “Out-o-place-ness,” o course, is
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always a relative matter, and so the presumed dangerous disorder o trans-
plantation in Mexico necessarily invokes a moral and social order that it
has contravened. Captured also in this notion o technology-out-o-place is
the powerul pull o not just ear but ascination contained in those (ofen
almost eagerly made) black market assumptions. For as Mary Douglas ex-plored long ago, both danger and desire are ofen compellingly commingled
at the ertile site o such transgressive boundary crossings.
At work in those technology-out-o-place reactions seemed to be a set o
assumptions about both Mexico as a place, and transplantation as a partic-
ular orm o medicine. On the one hand, such responses resonated strongly
with Nancy Stepan’s analysis o the ways in which science and technology
are so ofen presumed to move rom a (Western) center outward to a “prob-
lematic periphery,” such that Latin America historically has gured typi-cally as a (aulty) receiver o scientic knowledge and practice, rather than
a producer o such in its own right (Stepan 1991: 3; see also Soto Laveaga
2009). Such ows o technology rom center to periphery are reversed in the
way people in search o the stuff o lie (both jobs and health care) are ofen
understood to move instead rom periphery to center. This is a dynamic and
a set o expectations that operate with particular power in the context o the
highly charged and hierarchical history o U.S.-Mexico relations (Chavez
2013; Wailoo et al. 2006). Such entrenched expectations about ows o
both technology and people are precisely the context against which that
proudly told story o the German mother deliberately spoke back, assert-
ing the expertise o Mexican over German transplant surgeons in the use o
living donors and tracking the amily’s surprising, circular movement rst
away rom and then back to Mexico.
Also suracing in the conversations that stemmed rom those initial
technology-out-o-place reactions were questions not just o technological
expertise, but o priorities as well. Underlying concerns about the wisdom
o practicing transplantation in a country where other more basic lie needs
(such as clean water, adequate nutrition, and simple primary medical care)
ofen go unmet was an assumption that such high-tech biomedicine is a
luxury, one that ought to be permitted only afer a certain level o general
development and widespread well-being has been attained. This is a de-
ensible critique, to be sure, but one easily leveled at the United States as
well, a country that currently supports 245 transplant centers, yet until very
recently has permitted some fy million o its citizens to go without basic
health-care coverage ( 2014a).
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9
Yet in the context o such technology-out-o-place reactions, under-
standing transplantation as a orm o inappropriate health-care luxury rests
not just on the costly, high-tech nature o transplantation, but on a partic-
ular global health imaginary as well (Livingston 2012). This is an imagi-
nary in which Mexico—despite its relatively privileged positioning withinthe global South—is a place more likely to be characterized by illnesses o
inection, malnutrition, and poverty, rather than those o aging and chronic
disease so ofen associated with both rst world status and transplantation
itsel. Yet a vision o transplantation as something most needed in places
where people are able to live long enough and, in some sense, healthily
enough or their organs to wear out and need replacement is distinctly out o
sync with the epidemiological shape o kidney disease in Mexico. For chronic
disease is hardly a rst world prerogative. Diabetes— which leads to kidneyailure—is a public health problem o epidemic proportions in Mexico: it
is the leading cause o death among women (Rull et al. 2005), and affl icts
one quarter o all those between twenty-ve and orty years old (Correa-
Rotter and González-Michaca 2005). Indeed, chronic kidney disease spe-
cically is among the top ten causes o death in Mexico (García García et al.
2010). A key contributor to this massive disease burden are toxic exposures
to kidney-damaging chemicals rom a range o poorly regulated agricul-
tural, manuacturing, and pharmaceutical sources—exposures only on the
rise under the privatizing pressures o deregulation in Mexico, as in many
other places around the world (Hamdy 2012; Kierans 2015; Ramirez-Rubio
et al. 2013). And in many such places, as in Mexico, a medical treatment like
transplant that relies so intimately on the readily available bodies o amily
members may come—as we shall see—to register more as pragmatic neces-
sity rather than high-tech luxury.
Ultimately, encountering those recurrent technology-out-o-place
reactions—and the set o assumptions that underlay them—reinorced the
disquiet I elt over the way that the “problematic periphery” so requently
gured in accounts o transplantation primarily as the exploited source o
organs or transplant. Troubled by the sometimes sensationalistic, even
orientalizing, affects and effects o such accounts, this project was thus
motivated in part by a commitment to asking not just what happens when
people in “Other” places give (or sell or are robbed o ) their organs, but to
ollowing closely what happens when they get them as well. In the process
o asking such questions, the notion o technology-out-o-place serves as a
sort o mnemonic device, a reminder to stay always alert, à la Mary Douglas,
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to how particular categories are being constituted and to the boundaries
thus delineated, deended, and sometimes disrupted.
Iconic Mexico
It is within the context o such technology-out-o-place assumptions that
the story o the German mother with which I began signied so strategi-
cally. Acutely aware o the particular, privileged gaze rom the North given
voice in those initial reactions to my research, both the moral power o the
más mexicana mother and the prowess o Mexican transplant surgeons
highlighted in that story speak back with pointed precision to such assump-
tions. Such speaking back asserts that transplantation in Mexico cannot be
presumed to be merely a awed reproduction o what occurs in higher in-come countries, but has its own orms o expertise and merit. Not merely
reactive, however, such speaking back also works to highlight some o the
key dimensions o the local context critical to the particular ways in which
organ transplantation has come to matter in Mexico.
The story o the German mother who gave a kidney to her son has al-
ready alerted us to one o the most distinctive eatures o transplantation
in Mexico—an overwhelming dependence on living related organ donors. In
act, upward o 80 percent o kidney transplants in the programs I studied
were perormed using organs rom amily members. This stands in sharp
contrast to other settings where reliance upon cadaveric donors is ar greater
(such as the United States or, even more markedly, Spain), or where the use
o living unrelated donors/sellers is more common (such as India, Egypt, or
Israel). One effect o this dependence was to render kidney transplants the
only routine orm o solid organ transplantation then practiced in Mexico,
because hearts, livers, and lungs rom brain-dead donors generally were
too rarely available to support active transplant programs. As such, kidney
transplantation (with its organ-specic set o physiological, institutional,
and imaginative dimensions) ofen unctioned in Mexico as an icon o the
transplant endeavor as a whole in local imaginings and politics.
Thus it is that transplantation in Mexico was not only itsel iconic in
important ways but was deeply bound up with—indeed dependent on—
one o the key iconic eatures o Mexican culture, la familia mexicana. Much
has been written about the central place o the amily, both in the political
economy o the Mexican state and in the symbolic imaginings o Mexican
national identity (Diaz-Loving 2006; Keller et al 2006; Lester 2007; LeVine
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1993; Lewis 1959; Lomnitz and Pérez-Lizaur 1987). Ofen posed in explicit
contrast to the cold individualism thought to characterize the United States,
la amilia mexicana is typically imagined as large, multigenerational, cohe-
sive, and intensely loyal, a collective body that serves as the center o social,
economic, and moral lie. The notion o la amilia mexicana indexes a social world where individual autonomy is not enshrined as both social good and
personal goal, but rather where personhood is most meaningully enacted
and experienced through relatedness, materialized through dense ties o
love, responsibility, and interdependency and the endless give-and-take o
amily obligation. This is, o course, an idealized (and ideological) imagery,
but one that nonetheless retained considerable cultural orce in the making
o both Mexican identity and Mexican transplantation.
Powerul ideas not just about amily but about mothers in particularemerge in the story o the German mother, o course, and indeed the image
o la mujer sufrida or la mujer abnegada (the suffering or seless mother) was
also both an iconic one in Mexican culture writ large and crucial to the way
transplantation was locally enacted and interpreted. Clearly bound up with
highly gendered notions o kinship, la mujer surida is also a deeply reli-
gious gure, inevitably invoking the image o the Virgin Mary whose sor-
rowul pain is linked to human salvation. The requent subject o religious
iconographic paintings throughout the Christian world, the Virgin Mary
offers a vision o Mexican motherhood with considerable cultural currency
in a setting so thoroughly (though sometimes contentiously) suffused with
both Catholicism and newer orms o evangelical Christianity.
Yet eminine sel-sacrice is hardly all that the Virgin Mary may be
made to embody. In the distinctively Mexican gure o La Virgen de Guada-
lupe, whose exuberantly ubiquitous image adorns not only church altars but
community murals, cars, ags, belt buckles, and vivid tattoos throughout
Mexico, she is also a powerul and empowering symbol o deep national
pride (Baez- Jorge 1995; Brading 2001; Laaye 1976; Wol 1958). La Guada-
lupe’s miraculous sixteenth-century encounter with an indigenous peas-
ant outside o Mexico City marked an unprecedented appearance o the
Virgin on New World soil, signaling the emergence o the Mexican people
and nation into “ull-human” status at a colonial moment when there was
little room or either Indians or mestizos (“mixed blood” descendants o
Indian and European parents) in the existing spiritual, social, or legal or-
ders. This deep history renders La Guadalupe a richly polysemic gure in
Mexico, signiying sel-sacrice and sel-assertion, cherished tradition and
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12
aspirational modernity all at once. As such, she retains a contemporary
currency distinctive rom the way other situated incarnations o the Vir-
gin Mary may be waning in relevance, as Jane Collier has explored in rural
Spain, or example (Collier 1986). Also signaled in her much-reproduced
gure is the vibrancy o a popular Catholicism in Mexico that has since
its very beginnings been engaged in the lively creation o new saints o
all kinds—including a compelling contemporary gure known as El Niño
Doctor de los Enfermos (Baby Jesus, Doctor o the Sick), whom we will meet
in the pages to come. As we shall see, such saintly gures o La Guada-
lupe and El Niño Doctor orm part o a local grid o intelligibility through
which both women and men made sense o—and hence made possible—
the bodily sacrices required by transplantation.
Not merely a sanctied, celebrated gure, however, La Guadalupe in
Mexico is always shadowed by a darker double as well, a double given esh
in another iconic representation o Mexican womanhood consequential
or local interpretations and materializations o transplant: La Malinche. La
Malinche, the indigenous woman who stands accused o having betrayed
her people by enabling the Spanish conquest through her relationship with
Hernán Cortés, represents the other side o the eminine coin in Mexico
Figure I.1 La Virgen de Guadalupe hangs on a truck; image rom pilgrimage to the
Basílica o Guadalupe, December 2014. Photo by Miguel Tovar, Getty Images.
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13
(Alarcón 1981; Diaz del Castillo 1956; Glantz 1995). As such, she is also
linked with other powerul, painul images o womanhood, such as La Llo-
rona (the Weeping Woman), a amous ghost in Mexican olklore burdened
with guilt over killing her own children or the sake o a lover, said to appear
on lonely roads late at night to terriy unwary travelers (Candelaria 1993;Ingham 1986; Paz 1959). I the Virgin Mary represents woman’s potential or
nurturance and sel-sacrice, this shadow gure reveals the simultaneous
potential or betrayal and destruction also inherent in the roles o wie and
mother. In the chapters to come we will nd the suffering, powerul gure
o La Guadalupe (as well as her dangerous twins) echoed in the complexi-
ties o the role played by—and expected o—mothers in the processes and
politics surrounding living organ donation.
La Malinche stands as a central gure in a national imaginary not justo gender in Mexico, however, but o race as well. For it is rom the origi-
nary violence o her relationship with the Spanish conquistador Cortés that
a new nation is imagined to have been born in the racially mixed gure o
el mestizo. An image deliberately crafed as an act o political imagination
in the afermath o the Mexican Revolution in the early twentieth century,
el mestizo gures the nation as a kind o hybrid body, incorporating both
ancient indigenous and modern European selves into a vigorous new race
(Alonso 2004; Knight 1990; Vasconcelos 1979 [1925]). Meant to overcome
the ragmentation o a vast cultural and geographic landscape torn apart
afer a decade o devastating civil war, the notion o Mexico as a mestizo
nation has had enduring power, and the gure o el mestizo (which is,
notably, typically rendered as a masculine gure) has been mythologized
throughout Mexican art, literature, and political discourse. A site o both
celebration and contestation, however, critiques o el mestizo abound. Con-
temporary indigenous Mexicans, or example, indict the way the discourse
o mestizaje slyly celebrates heterogeneity as means o enorcing homoge-
neity, pointing out that they are not merely part o Mexico’s past (Stephen
2002). Caught up in such disputes, the hybrid mestizo body nonetheless
remains an iconic sign o Mexican national identity. And the specic poli-
tics and aesthetics o this guring matter or the way the bodies wrought by
transplant may—as in the story o the German mother—become similarly
caught up in imaginings o a national sel. For this is an imagery that brings
particular inections o race, o gender, and o underlying violence to the
local shape o transplant practice. In the chapters to come we will see how
the legacy o mestizaje may haunt the emergence o this new orm o hybrid
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14
body in Mexico, a body wrought, this time, by the biomedical marvels and
uncanny conjoinings o transplantation.
I imaginings o Mexico as a mestizo nation turn out to be somewhat
ambivalent—born out o both colonial violence and hopes or postrevolu-
tionary cohesion and peace—so too is the state itsel an ambiguous gurein the story o how transplant has come to matter in Mexico. Following the
decades-long single-party rule o the Partido Revolucionario Institucional
(), a period characterized by socialist ideals, authoritarian oppression,
and the exertion o political power through a capillary-like system o
patronage relations, the Mexican State has been acing a prooundly un-
settled contemporary moment. Widespread neoliberal reorms enacted
under the pressures o global capitalism in the late twentieth century—
including the structural adjustment policies o the 1980s and the NorthAmerican Free Trade Agreement () o the 1990s—have been ollowed
by upheavals o various kinds: rom the peasant uprising o the Zapatistas
in southern Mexico, to the deeat o the in the presidential election o
2000 or the rst time in nearly seventy years, to the rising regime o a bru-
tal drug economy in which Mexican police, military, and political offi cials
have been deeply implicated (Campbell 2014; Gledhill 1999; Muehlmann
2013; Stephen 2002). It was amid such pervasive political uncertainties
that transplantation in Mexico took root primarily in the public health-care
system—a system that was at once one o the last remaining vestiges o the
Revolution’s commitment to the collective well-being o the people and a
key site o recurrent public scandals about offi cial abuses both physical and
nancial. The particular institutional shape and clinical practices o state-
supported transplant in Mexico thus served as a site where the biopolitics o
making live (or not) and risking lie (or not) were sometimes starkly visible,
condensed in the bodies o those chosen to receive organs and those called
upon to provide them (Foucault 1976).
As such, I attend in the chapters to come to the notion o Mexico as a
kind o slippery State, a deeply biopolitical body o governance that operated
as a source o both lie-giving, practical benets and everyday experiences
o insecurity and disillusionment. Such unsettled, unsettling political con-
ditions rendered actors in the transplant endeavor ofen illegible to one an-
other—as well as to a wider public—in both practical and moral terms.
This was a world in which the gure beore you in the doctor’s white coat
might be dedicated healer, greedy proteer, ambitious politician, ground-
breaking scientist, or dangerous tracante (traffi cker o drugs, o organs, o
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15
other coveted, illicit goods). Or he or she might, at different moments, in
different relational contexts, inhabit some complex combination o those
roles. These orms o illegibility and the pervasive political uncertainty that
produced them also had, as we shall see, palpable consequences or how
the transplant endeavor did—and did not—come to matter in the slipperyState o Mexico.
Taken together, this series o gures—la amilia mexicana, the suffer-
ing mother (who is both La Guadalupe and La Malinche), el mestizo, and
the slippery State—animate a complex iconography o gender, ethnicity,
religion, and nationalism in Mexico. They serve as evocative shorthand or
some o the distinctive eatures o the Mexican setting that have shaped
how transplantation there has taken clinical shape and produced meaning
in both personal and political registers. Yet invoking such iconic guresis both useul and always an already compromised endeavor, or simply
identiying their potency—the way they represent ideas that travel and
carry orce in the world—runs always the risk o reiying it. Contested,
contradictory, and incomplete as they are, these gures nonetheless orm
part o a symbolic idiom upon which people—patients, amilies, medical
proessionals, politicians, and others—draw in diverse ways on imaginings
o sel and nation. And so, in the pages to come, we will watch or how these
gures are evoked and instrumentalized in the stories, logics, expectations,
and images with which people made meaning o transplantation—and
hence made transplantation—in locally particular ways.
Tapatío Transplantation
While it is possible—and sometimes useul—to traffi c in notions o cul-
ture and identity at a national level, Mexico is an immense, sprawling, and
hugely diverse country, rie with sharply drawn and dearly held regional
differences. The iconic gures o La Guadalupe, el mestizo, and others ex-
plored above operate as a set o widely shared symbols, a sort o national
idiom on which people in different social and geographic locations draw in
distinctive ways. Yet beyond these broad strokes o the larger context, the
particularities o the local setting where this study was conducted are cru-
cial as well. This research was based in the city o Guadalajara, Mexico, and
the project has extended over a twelve- year period rom 1998 to 2010, with
the most intensive period o yearlong eldwork occurring at the turn o the
millennium. Guadalajara, whose inhabitants proudly reer to themselves
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16
as tapatíos, is Mexico’s second-largest city. Located several hundred miles
northwest o Mexico City, Guadalajara serves as a major resource and ser-
vice hub to the six surrounding states (Jalisco, Michoacán, Nayarrít, Gua-
najuato, Colima, and Aguascalientes). Reecting the extreme urban con-
centration o health-care resources in Mexico more generally, Guadalajaramaintains two elite tertiary-level hospitals that draw people seeking spe-
cialized care—such as transplantation—rom all over western Mexico and
beyond. At the time o this research, Guadalajara housed the most active
kidney transplantation program in all o Mexico, an unusual coup over the
typically dominant Distrito Federal o Mexico City. It was an achievement o
which the local transplant community—composed o a diverse, unevenly
articulated array o social actors including patients, donors, amily mem-
bers, clinicians, social workers, administrators, pharmaceutical salespeo-ple, and government offi cials— was understandably proud.
Appealing as a research site or this reason alone, Guadalajara also
occupies a very particular cultural and political economic space in Mexico.
Although a major metropolitan area, Guadalajara at the turn o the mil-
lennium did not come close to either the sprawling growth or the high
crime rates o the capital, something or which its inhabitants regularly
pronounced themselves grateul. A common rerain in casual conversation
was that Guadalajara was más tranquilo (more calm) than Mexico City, offer-
ing a more civil and gracious pace o lie. Guadalajara is ofen represented
both by its own inhabitants and by other Mexicans as a deeply traditional
city, and the region has long served as the source o various emblematic
symbols o “Mexican-ness” including mariachi music, tequila, and charrería
(a orm o rodeo known or its athleticism and dramatic showmanship).
These are much loved—and also much caricatured—symbols o Mexican
culture that signiy and circulate powerully both within and across na-
tional borders. In keeping with this image o traditionalism, Guadalajara is
also widely known as a politically conservative and deeply Catholic city, one
that has retained much o the gracious architecture and wide boulevards o
the colonial era (Carrillo 2002). Simply riding a bus around the city could
quickly reveal these characteristics—passing one o the many beautiul
churches and cathedrals ofen elicited a startlingly immediate response as
many on the bus would rapidly touch orehead, sternum, and each shoulder
in the sign o the cross, sometimes murmuring a quiet prayer.
Yet the particular inection o traditional Mexico conjured in common-
place representations o Guadalajara was a decidedly mestizo one—unlike
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the southern region o Mexico, there was a relatively small population in the
Guadalajara region that was visibly marked or marked itsel as indigenous.
With the exception o a small contingent o Huichol people who were most
visible in the city as street vendors o artisanal crafs, indigenous dress, cus-
toms, and language did not generally provide public lines o demarcationalong an axis o race or ethnicity in Guadalajara. Such lines were marked
out in more subtle ways, however, by reerence to physical eatures such as
the shorter stature, darker skin, and strong “Mayan” nose thought to place
someone closer to the Indian than to the European end o the mestizo
spectrum. Cowboy boots and hats on men, and long, ull skirts and shawls
used as both bodily wrap and modest head-covering or women comprised
other such markers by which people in Guadalajara reerred obliquely to
notions o race or ethnicity via an idiom o urban/rural and class distinc-tions. During my eldwork I only rarely heard anyone use the pejorative
indio, however reerences to a particular patient as muy típico (very typical,
very traditional) or muy folklórico (very olkloric) might be delivered in a
somewhat sly aside, ofen meant to contextualize what might then be de-
scribed as a “superstitious” mind-set or an “inadequate” living situation
in the context o transplantation. Given this local context, race or ethnic-
ity does not make the kind o overt appearance as a key axis o differen-
tiation in this research that it surely would have made had this work been
conducted in a more explicitly ethnicized setting like Oaxaca in southern
Mexico. However, local assumptions about race or ethnicity are intimately
bound up with the more commonly employed distinctions o class and
urban/rural identity that recur throughout the book.
Despite being so powerully imagined as a site and source o Mexican
tradition, Guadalajara is also a prooundly global city with long-standing
connections to complex ows o money, people, and technology rom all
over the world. Reecting a trend o growing investment by multinational
rms, or instance, Guadalajara at the turn o the millennium was the site
o some 20 percent o ’s world production (Napolitano 2002: 198). The
city also boasts an excellent university and a well-known medical school,
which attracts a large number o international (especially U.S.) students.
In addition, the area is the site o a well-established U.S. retirement com-
munity centered on nearby Lake Chapala—a development that has enticed
some Guadalajara physicians (including one o the transplant surgeons we
will encounter in the pages that ollow) to begin to contemplate entrepre-
neurial schemes or attracting the private health-care dollars o this aging
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population. In act, the retirement community’s English-language news-
paper ran an interview with this particular transplant surgeon in which he
suggested that, in the not-too-distant uture, North Americans might nd
the local health-care system a source o con venient and lower-cost organ
transplantation (Miller 1999). Global connections ow outward romGuadalajara as well, rom the long-standing migration o manual laborers
through the ormal U.S. Bracero Program o the mid-twentieth century up
to the present-day routinized but risky border crossings o undocumented
workers. And elites rom the region in business, politics, and science also
circulate widely through international networks o training, employment,
and leisure travel. Although the above-mentioned transplant surgeon’s
hoped-or uture ow o transplant-seeking North Americans had not yet
materialized at the time o this research, Mexican patients in act provedto be quite adept at mobilizing global ties o various kinds in pursuing and
managing their transplants. In the chapters to come we will encounter liv-
ing donors who return rom the United States in order to provide a kidney
to a amily member, as well as patients who rely on a constant ow o both
money and inormation provided by amily in the United States in order to
negotiate the process o seeking a transplant.
Such global linkages carry transplant proessionals away rom Mexico
in search o training, to elite centers o transplant medicine in the United
States, Europe, and Japan, and also work to bring transplant experts in
rom elsewhere. During my research one o the local hospitals hosted two
prestigious conerences organized around visits by transplant surgeons and
organ procurement proessionals rom Spain—a country that served as an
important model or the transplant endeavor in Mexico, not just because o
the close linguistic, cultural, and historical ties between the two countries,
but because Spain boasted the most successul cadaveric organ donation
program in the world. As a visiting American researcher, I sometimes
ound mysel enrolled in the complicated politics o these global proes-
sional networks in unexpected ways. In one such instance, a rival depart-
ment chairman arrived on the transplant ward to proudly (and pointedly)
introduce a visiting American cardiac surgeon. Beore I quite knew what
had happened, I ound mysel being pushed orward by the transplant
program director (in a parrying move) as “his American scientist” here to
study and work with him. Hardly used to being summoned as a source o
scientic prestige in quite this way, the moment elt to me like an ediying
twist on the discredited anthropological habit o proprietary reerences to
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the places we have worked as “my community,” oregrounding just one o
the potential ways in which my gringa positioning might be instrumental-
ized by those I sought to study. Highlighted also in that slightly awkward,
somewhat unny moment was the complexity o the multidirectional ows
o people, ideas, and resources o all sorts that make up transplantation asa set o practices (and ideas) that are at once powerully global in their cir-
culations and inescapably local in their instantiation.
A Tale (Mostly) of Two Institutions
Transplantation in Guadalajara at the turn o the millennium was highly
centered in the city’s two elite tertiary-level public hospitals, both o which
housed active kidney transplant programs (as well as nascent liver trans-plant programs). These hospitals represent the two major government-
run health-care systems in Mexico, the Instituto Mexicano de Seguro
Social (—Mexican Institute o Social Security) and the Secretaria de
Salud (SSa—Ministry o Health). Other key elements o the health-care
landscape in Mexico, including private hospitals and the panoply o “al-
ternative” health-care ser vices provided by naturistas, curanderos, homeopa-
tas (naturalists, olk healers, homeopaths), and others, are also part o
the local story o transplantation and will make occasional appearances
in the pages to come. And yet part o what was so striking about transplant
in Mexico was precisely its emergence as a phenomenon primarily o the
public health-care system, rather than o the proteering private sector.
Private hospitals in Guadalajara at the time o this research engaged only
passingly in transplantation as a matter o marketable prestige—trading on
the iconic, high-tech mystique o transplant to bolster a hospital’s cutting-
edge reputation—rather than o direct prot (see also Cohen 1999 on the
marketing allure o transplant in the Indian health-care landscape). As one
private hospital director told me quite bluntly: “It’s not worth it to us, rom
a nancial perspective. We do a ew or the prestige, but we’re not really that
interested in getting into the business o transplantation” (Dr. Alvarez).
Transplantation in Mexico was thus undamentally both a amily matter,
deeply dependent on the bodies o those living related donors, and a public
affair, rooted in the institutions o an increasingly eroded but still essential
national health-care system.
Broadly speaking, the system at the time o this research was the
largest o the ederal health-care systems, providing coverage or slightly
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over hal o the Mexican population and serving primarily working- to
middle-class people whose employment in the ormal sector paid into the
national Social Security system ( 2000). Nationally, the pos-
sessed the best-developed inrastructure o clinics, hospitals, and special-
ized equipment o any o the Mexican health-care institutions—includingthe private sector. Yet the clinics and hospitals were typically overbur-
dened and undersupplied, and many patients who had rights to the system
ofen opted or private care or minor ailments when they could afford it, in
order to avoid long waits, out-o-stock pharmacies, and care that could be
notoriously brusque. Deeply awed but also deeply necessary as the primary
source o health care or the majority o Mexicans, the was regarded
by many as one o the last remnants o the largely abandoned hopes o the
Revolution, representing a national commitment to at least the promise (inot the reality) o health care as a universal right o the people.
At the time o this study, the Centro Médico de Especialidades
(Specialty Medical Center) in Guadalajara housed the country’s most active
kidney transplant program. Although the hospital’s rst successul kidney
transplant was carried out in 1976, until the mid-1990s transplant activity re-
mained sporadic at best, and in some years not a single transplant was per-
ormed. While the demonstrated ability to do transplants was valued as a
mark o scientic achievement, any sizable expansion was thought to be un-
realistic. In 1995, however, a nephrologist resh rom training in the United
States took over with an ambitious vision or dramatically building the trans-
plant program and growing the yearly transplantation rate. His plans, which
leaned heavily on the wooing o donations rom multinational pharmaceuti-
cal companies, were deemed so outrageous by his colleagues that he
was dubbed “MonteAlbán” in a derisive play on his own name that cheekily
invoked both the massiveness o the amous pre-Columbian archaeological
site in southern Mexico and the Mexican actor, Ricardo Montalbán, who
played host on the old American tele vision program Fantasy Island. Over
the next ve years however, those monumental, antastical goals were
achieved, and at the time o this research, the program was perorming ap-
proximately two hundred kidney transplants per year and was beginning to
build a liver transplant program as well. Worthy o a study all its own, this
growth involved the complex interplay o dogged determination, politics
both institutional and personal, the costly economics o kidney therapies,
surgical charisma, and the glamorous media-grabbing cachet o transplan-
tation, among a host o other actors.
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The transplant program was housed in the tall hospital tower o
the Centro Médico, a stark concrete landmark in the generally low-
slung cityscape o Guadalajara. The scale and the scuffed marble oors o
the building reected a ormer grandeur that has been slowly worn down
by day-to-day use and the unending passage o the sick and their amilies.Upstairs, the transplant program occupied the better part o an entire oor,
sharing space with the dialysis and hemodialysis programs that served the
hospital’s kidney patients. Patients, amily members, and staff bustled their
way in and out o patient rooms and staff offi ces, requently crowding the hall-
way as they lay in wait hoping to catch an elusive physician or the constantly-
in-motion transplant coordinator. Patients and their amilies were a varied
lot, ranging rom urban actory workers and small-business people to
rural campesinos (armers) to the occasional well-heeled house wie.There was constant activity as patients came in and out o the coordina-
tor’s and doctors’ offi ces, clutching charts and X-rays, setting up appoint-
ments, seeking inormation, bureaucratic orms, and reassurance. As
patients interacted with transplant staff, there was also occasional emo-
tional chaos—tears, anger, ear, recrimination, but also laughter, joy, and
ervent gratitude.
More loosely organized than the , the largely state-run SSa system
was essentially a public charity system designed to care or the most vul-
nerable members o society. Estimates suggest that approximately 10 to
15 percent o the population depended primarily upon the SSa or health
care ( 2000). Patients in the SSa system paid “quotas” or their care,
based on a sliding scale assessment o income, and many paid nothing
at all. Though patients required neither the ability to pay nor an outside
reerral to access the SSa system, interminably long waits or hospital beds
and ser vices greatly restricted access, sometimes catastrophically so. Re-
garded by many as a “poor people’s hospital” where those without hope go
to die, the SSa hospital’s university affi liation meant that it was also a site
or academic teaching and research, as well as or sometimes cutting-edge
medical care such as transplantation.
The SSa hospital’s transplant program was also under the direction o
a U.S.-trained nephrologist. Although the program was offi cially launched
in 1988, the rst kidney transplant was not carried out until December
1990—a delay characteristic o this perpetually resource-strapped hospi-
tal. Subsequent growth was halting, never quite achieving the goal o one
transplant per month. A major limitation o growth was the hospital’s
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inability to provide patients with the immunosuppressive drugs required
afer transplant surgery, due to the SSa mandate to provide coverage or
in-patient care only. All too aware o the lielong and extremely expensive
commitment these drugs represent, the program director was reluctant to
transplant patients without a plan to guarantee ongoing medication access.Such plans ranged rom cobbling together money rom private beneactors
to brokering discounts with the pharmaceutical companies to nding post-
transplant employment or patients that would entitle them to access to the
system and its drug benets. Despite such limitations, however, the
SSa hospital not only maintained an active kidney transplant program but
was also the site o the country’s only successul liver transplant program
during the study period.
The SSa transplant program in Guadalajara was housed in the AntiguoHospital Civil (Old Civil Hospital). Itsel a hybrid structure, one hal o
the hospital consisted o the “old wing”—a structure built by the Spanish
bishop o the city nearly two hundred years beore. This older section o
the hospital combined graceul open courtyards with long, echoing, grim
hospital wards lined with narrow cots and makeshif curtains. In a dense
layering o histories o suffering and stigma, the ward that had once served
as the leprosy wing in the hospital had become, during my time there, the
unit. This original structure was connected to a newer medical tower,
a dingy concrete structure with overcrowded waiting areas and perennially
out-o-service elevators. The SSa transplant program was somewhat splin-
tered between these sections o the hospital, and transplant program staff,
patients, and their amilies shuttled constantly between the nephrology
oor, the transplant program offi ce, hemodialysis, and the intensive care
unit. Like the patient population, the SSa patients were also a mixed
lot, although Mexicans with various markers o both rural lie and Indian
ethnicity were much more common than in the hospital—cowboy
hats and boots on the men, women with shawls drawn careully and de-
murely over their heads, and the stature, skin tone, and acial structure o
indigenous Mexicans were ubiquitous. Urban, working-class mestizos also
abounded, however, and occasionally there appeared patients or amily
members whose clothes, cell phones, and style o speech signaled a more
prosperous economic stratum. Patients and their amilies waited propped
up against walls, or, i they were lucky, in imsy plastic chairs, to be called
into staff offi ces and consultation rooms. Many people brought blankets,
ood, even pillows, knowing rom experience that the wait could be a long
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one. A certain camaraderie ofen grew up among them as they waited or
wandered the halls, sharing inormation and rustrations, hope, and the
occasional piece o ruit.
Though sketched out here as separate entities, any neatly drawn distinc-
tions between the social security setting o the , the public charity set-ting o the SSa, and even the presumably privileged setting o the private
health-care system proved hard to maintain once on the ground. Both phy-
sicians and patients were mobile elements within the matrix o health-care
options, constantly and strategically shifing back and orth between differ-
ent institutional settings as they tried to maximize the relative advantages
o each. Physicians ofen juggled jobs in the public and private sector—
holding positions in the government hospitals or the prestige and access
to more advanced technology and equipment but needing a private prac-tice as well in order to make ends meet. Patients too, across the socioeco-
nomic range, moved—sometimes defly, sometimes haltingly—across the
complex health-care landscape, making use o a mix o private and various
public health care ser vices, and ofen combining biomedicine with home-
opathy, naturalism, and/or curandería (olk healing) in ways that to them elt
complementary rather than contradictory. Such constant interconnections
between institutional settings, as well as the relatively small size o the still-
in-ormation local transplant endeavor, created a degree o social intensity
and ofen ace-to-ace interaction best captured by the notion o transplant
community I use throughout this book. Indeed, it was precisely these in-
terconnections that surely made the story o the más mexicana German
mother so widely shared among so many o those I rst met as I began this
work. Ultimately, this was the complex, shifing institutional ground upon
which the complex nexus o relations entailed in what Lesley Sharp so use-
ully terms “organ transer” has come to matter in Mexico (Sharp 2006: 3).
Tracking Transplantation
In approaching a topic as layered with antasies, ears, embodied despera-
tion, and institutional complexity as organ transplantation, I was com-
mitted to the amiliar anthropological approach o staying put, convinced
that long-standing strategies o showing up, hanging out, riding the daily
rhythms, and sharing meals, rustrations, emergencies, tedium, and end-
less conversations with the same group o people or an extended period
could produce a richness o data and insight hard to come by otherwise.
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And so, employing the classic ethnographic methods o participant obser-
vation and in-depth interviewing, I devoted much o my time in Mexico to
the and the SSa hospitals, ensuring that I was an ongoing presence
in both throughout the course o my eldwork. Observations took place
everywhere I could think to go in the complex social world o the hospi-tal, in the perpetually overcrowded offi ces o transplant coordinators and
physicians, in patient rooms and operating rooms, at nurses’ stations and
pharmacy lines, in clinic rooms and waiting rooms, and at patient support
groups and staff meetings. Time spent around the transplant wards allowed
me to develop a nodding acquaintanceship with patients that ofen grew
into conversations and, when they were willing, ormal interviews. Ofen,
in act, patients approached me rst, ull o curiosity about what such an
obvious gringa was doing hanging around in the hospital all the time—thelittle notebook that served as my constant companion requently prompted
initial assumptions that I was a reporter. The relationships that grew out
o those early interactions allowed me, in many cases, to ollow patients,
amilies, and the clinicians who cared or them out o the hospital and into
their lives, spending time with them in their homes, workplaces, avorite
restaurants, nearby parks, and even a local bowling alley where a group o
us met on Sunday afernoons or a ew games and lots o laughter.
The eld notes I took by hand each day and recorded and expanded on
my laptop each evening eventually accrued observational and interview data
on 323 transplant patient cases, and on 74 potential cadaveric organ dona-
tion cases. These qualitative data were augmented by quantitative statistics
shared with me by each transplant program rom its own patient databases.
I conducted in-depth, taped interviews with 50 transplant patients, divided
between the and the SSa programs, and including patients already
transplanted, patients awaiting transplantation with a live donor, and
patients on the waiting list or a cadaveric transplant. In all, I ormally
interviewed 22 emale patients and 28 male patients, with ages ranging
rom seventeen to sixty-two. Patient socioeconomic status varied widely,
and interview participants ranged rom college-educated upper/middle-
class (engineer, small business owner) to high school–educated working-
class (actory worker, ood vendor) to grade school–educated marginalized
poor (arm laborer, unemployed single mother). In addition, I interviewed
key transplant proessionals in both hospitals, including physicians, sur-
geons, transplant coordinators, and nurses, as well as administrators re-
sponsible or policy and budget decision-making. I pursued questions o
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policy outside the hospital walls as well, through interviews with regional
government offi cials involved in transplant-related policy, including mem-
bers o the nascent statewide Consejo Estatal de Trasplante de Organos y
Tejidos (State Council on Organ and Tissue Transplantation), a politically
contentious body still in ormation at the time.Another tactic or tracing the movement o people, practices, and ideas
outside o the hospitals themselves was attending a number o conerences
and training courses (some or the general public, some or various types o
medical personnel) on organ donation and transplantation. Other public-
education events were also important sources o ethnographic experience
and inormation, including several publicity stunts planned by patients to
draw attention to their plight. Toward the end o my main eldwork stint, I
was invited to present two papers on my research at a national conerenceon transplantation held or medical proessionals rom around the country,
an opportunity that allowed me to reect some o my preliminary ndings
back to the local transplant community and opened up urther avenues o
discussion.
And nally, I sought to extend my research outside o the transplant
community itsel—beyond the countless conversations with riends, street
vendors, taxi drivers, and random acquaintances in which all anthropolo-
gists engage. Such efforts included systematically monitoring the popular
media or news stories about transplantation in particular and health care
more generally, a task greatly aided by the hospital’s news media clip-
ping ser vice. I also conducted a small series o interviews with Catholic
priests—including the bishop o the main cathedral in Guadalajara—about
the Church’s attitudes toward transplantation and donation and about
priests’ own experiences and belies in dealing with such issues in their own
congregations. Another window into a wider point o view was provided by
a new state initiative in Jalisco to record willingness to serve as an organ
donor on drivers’ licenses—a program that generated data on donation at-
titudes o upward o 120,000 new license recipients.
Doing anthropology entails not just collecting all o these variegated
orms o data, o course, but deciding how to make sense o and represent
them. At a practical level, I have ollowed anthropological convention
in protecting the identities o research participants. The names o all
patients, amily members, transplant proessionals, and government o-
cials have been changed throughout, and in some cases individual details
have been combin