Summary
Contents
Subject index
‘An excellent book. The authors have the rare capacity to handle popular culture and case studies in a theoretically informed manner. Original and well researched’ — Mike Featherstone, Nottingham Trent University. Understandings of globalization have been little explored in relation to gender or related concerns such as identity, subjectivity and the body. This book contrasts ‘the natural’ and ‘the global’ as interpretive strategies, using approaches from feminist cultural theory. The book begins by introducing the central themes: ideas of the natural; questions of scale and context posed by globalization and their relation to forms of cultural production; the transformation of genealogy; and the emergence of interest in definitions of life an life forms.
Life Itself: Global Nature and the Genetic Imaginary
Life Itself: Global Nature and the Genetic Imaginary
A defining feature of the present moment is our ambivalent encounter with biotechnology – a discomfort future analysts are likely to interpret as more than millennial nostalgia for the passing of long-established certainties. As ...
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