From Measuring Rods to DNA Sequencing
This book provides a solid basis to understand two centuries of bodily measurement practices and their scientific and political scope throughout the Western world. By exploring various cases, it proposes a new approach of measurement from an epistemological point of view and demonstrates the central role of the measurement of the body for political purposes. By studying categorizations of race, age and quality of life between the 19th and 20th century, the first part of the book highlights how human body measurements extend from the flesh to subjective experience. The second part shows how genomic correction and life support technologies reshape the frontiers between things, humans and social subjects. The final part reveals how contemporary measurements of age, race and disease gave rise to new hierarchies between human beings and social groups. The book concludes by considering different styles of measuring the body and their ontological consequences.
ISBN: | 9789811575815 |
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Sprache: | Englisch |
Seitenzahl: | 282 |
Produktart: | Gebunden |
Herausgeber: | Julien, Marie-Pierre Voléry, Ingrid |
Verlag: | Springer Singapore |
Veröffentlicht: | 06.12.2020 |
Untertitel: | Assessing the Human |
Schlagworte: | biotechnologies classification of living beings measuring bodies medical and identification devices social construction of the human being the person and the subject |
Ingrid Voléry is full professor of sociology at the Université de Lorraine and member of Laboratoire Lorrain de Sciences Sociales (2L2S). Marie-Pierre Julien is lecturer of sociology and anthropology at the Université de Lorraine and member of 2L2S.