Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
Calculated based on number of publications stored in Pure and citations from Scopus
20072023

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Biography

My first academic work took place in the early 1990s at Macquarie University's National Centre for HIV Social Research. There I trained as a qualitative sex researcher and began my immersion in the sexual politics of health and illness.

I then undertook my PhD at the newly formed Department of Women's Studies at Sydney University, which became the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies during my candidature. This work was later revised and published as Messengers of Sex: Hormones, biomedicine and feminism (2007). After graduating, I worked at the National Breast Cancer Centre, undertaking qualitative work on specialist breast nursing and teaching women how to be technoscientifically-informed patient activists.

In 2000, I started to work with Raewyn Connell at the University of Sydney on a project on gender equity in the public sector, but then moved to Lancaster University in 2001 to work with Sarah Franklin on the then very contentious area of genetic testing of pre-implantation embryos (created through IVF processes). We undertook an ethnographic study of this technique in two leading British hospitals, which was later published as Born and Made: An ethnography of Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis (2006).

In 2003, I was made a permanent member of the Sociology Department at Lancaster University, and I worked there until 2018. In 2015, I published a new monograph, entitled Puberty in Crisis: The sociology of early sexual development. As Lancaster, I was actively involved in the Centre for Science Studies, the Centre for Gender and Women's Studies, and the Centre for the Economic and Social Aspects of Genomics. With Debra Ferreday, Imogen Tyler and Vicky Singleton, I was at various times Co-Director of the Centre for Gender and Women's Studies. During my time in the UK I worked on several large European-Commission funded projects, building a network of colleagues working in Science and Technology Studies in Sweden, the Netherlands, Spain, Denmark, Ireland, Portugal and France. My co-edited Companion to Actor-Network Theory and co-authored book, Living Data: Making sense of helath biosensing, are outputs of these collaborations.

In September 2018, I returned to Australia to take up a position in the School of Sociology. I am absolutely thrilled to be working with colleagues in the School and reconnecting with scholars in Australia, including kylie valentine and Jackie Leach Scully at UNSW and Catherine Mills at Monash, with whom I started a new project on epigenetics in 2022, and ANU colleagues, Mary Lou Rasmussen, Helen Keane, Catherine Waldby, Rebecca Williamson and many others with whom I am working on feminism, sexuality, and reproduction. 

Qualifications

PhD, Gender and Women's Studies, University of Sydney

Research Interests

I work in the area of Feminist Technoscience Studies, with particular focus on reproduction, sexuality, sex/ gender, embodiment and health.

I am the author or editor of seven books: on sex hormones and embodiment, on genetic testing and reproductive technologies, on early onset puberty, health biosensing, Actor-Network Theory and reproduction in climate crisis. These are listed below. I also have a long track-record in work on ageing and new technologies of care.

I have a strong interest in feminist and queer theory and how they can help us understand how human and non-human bodies are changing in the current era of environmental disaster. My recent book with Mary Lou Rasmussen, Louisa Allen and Rebecca Williamson, Reproduction, Kin and Climate Crisis: Making Bushfire Babies (Bristol UP) focuses on reproduction, kin and care in climate crisis. This is based on research into the 2019-20 bushfires in South Eastern Australia.

I am also continuing to work on hormones and have recently co-edited a new book in this area with colleagues in the UK and Europe, entitled Hormonal Theory (Bloomsbury Press). In 2024, Mary Lou Rasmussen, Helen Keane and I are leading a new interdisciplinary network entitled Experimenting with Estrogens, funded by ANU's Gender Institute.

Another line of research concerns the rise of neuroscientifically-informed parenting practices and popular, therapeutic and biomedical accounts of the effects of early-life trauma throughout childhood and adult life. I have a long-standing interest in the intwinement of psychodynamic and other psychological accounts of subjectivity with neurological and other technoscientific accounts. 

Research student supervision

  • Registered to supervise

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics where Celia Roberts is active. These topic labels come from the works of this person. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
  • 1 Similar Profiles

Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years

Find out about recent ANU collaborations across the world by selecting a location on the map OR