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Sophie Lewis

Sophie Lewis (born 1988) is a German-British writer and independent scholar based in Philadelphia, mainly known for her anti-state communism, transfeminism, literary criticism, and cultural analysis, especially her critical-utopian theorization of "full surrogacy", her idea that "all reproduction is assisted" as well as "amniotechnics", and her advocacy for family abolition.

Early life and education

Lewis was born in Vienna and raised between Geneva and France. Her mother, Ingrid Helga Lewis, was a middle-class German liberal who was once a Maoist involved in the West German student movement at the University of Göttingen. Her maternal grandfather was an Adolf Hitler supporter and served in the Wehrmacht and her maternal grandmother was ex-Jewish. Her parents met in Vienna when her mother worked for the BBC German Service. According to Lewis, her mother discovered her Jewish heritage in 2008; her mother's family, the Sternbergs, had changed their surname and had converted to Christianity shortly before The Holocaust "in order to embrace anti-Semitic Gentile life." Lewis's mother was an Anglophile who repudiated German culture and refused to teach her children the German language.

Career

After completing her PhD, Lewis published her first book, Full Surrogacy Now: Feminism against the Family. It examines the surrogacy industry with a focus on the contradictions of capitalist reproduction. It was followed by Abolish the Family: A Manifesto for Care and Liberation in 2022, in which "Lewis imagines a future where the labor of making new human beings is shared among all of us, 'mother' no longer being a natural category, but instead something we can choose." Lewis' third book, Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation looks at competing versions of feminism historically.

Lewis has published essays in Harper's Magazine, the London Review of Books, Boston Review, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Logic(s), The Baffler Lux Magazine, Parapraxis, Tank, The Nation, e-flux, Mal Journal, Dissent, The New Inquiry, Jacobin, The White Review, and Salvage. Lewis's articles have appeared in Feminist Theory, Paragraph, Feminist Review, Signs, ', Gender, Place & Culture, and Dialogues in Human Geography.

Lewis's German-English translations for MIT Press include A Brief History of Feminism (Antje Schrupp) and Communism for Kids (Bini Adamczak). Her translation of Sabine Hark and Paula-Irene Villa Braslavsky's book The Future of Difference: Beyond the Toxic Entanglement of Racism, Sexism and Feminism was published by Verso Books in 2020.

Reception

Lewis's work has been positively reviewed in The New Yorker, the London Review of Books, The Times Literary Supplement, the New Statesman, and Libcom.org.

Right-wing and religious commentators have written negative reviews of Lewis's work. Some centrist, left-leaning, and social democratic commentators have been critical of her work, including Amber A'Lee Frost, Nina Power, Elizabeth Bruenig, Tom Whyman, Angela Nagle, Antonella Gambotto-Burke, and others. Most of the criticism is towards her views that "children don't belong to anyone" and "children belong to us all," as described by Richard Seymour in his essay "Notes on a Normie Shit-Storm".

Books

  • Full Surrogacy Now: Feminism Against Family, Verso Books (2019)
  • Abolish the Family: A Manifesto for Care and Liberation, Verso Books (2022)
  • Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation, Haymarket Books (2025)

References

External links