This chapter explores the demand for egg freezing and its impact on fertility, followed by a discussion on the life of Isabel Crook, a passionate communist who conducted studies in rural villages in China during the Second World War and the rise of the communist regime.
The highest interest rates in years should lead to a fall in house prices. But peculiarities of America’s mortgage market are driving them up. Egg-freezing was supposed to give women more control over childbearing; we look at scant data showing how successful it really is (10:57). And remembering Isabel Crook, an anthropologist who embraced China’s communist transformation, warts and all (15:44).
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