"Marder's writing is beautiful and compelling. She deftly moves between philosophy, literature, film and popular culture to create novel interpretations of maternity, sex and death." -- -Kelly Oliver Vanderbilt University "In this intellectually luxuriant book Elissa Marder analyzes a whole series of effects that come into play by virtue of our being 'not present' at, yet haunted by, constantly mourning our birth. But her coup de genie is to conclude thereby that the relation to birth, and indeed the constitution of the maternal body, is prosthetic, even technological: we cannot not return to the birth that stays with us throughout our life, and we cannot not set about producing a variety of mechanical reproductions of the "experience." Marder explores those reproductions-- from Cixous to Racine and Mary Shelley, from Derrida to Blade Runner, infanticide and Abu Ghraib--with an extraordinarily uncanny set of intellectual and academic antennae, producing ingenious insights from a minutely attentive reading practice." -- -David Wills University at Albany-SUNY