Developmental Narratives: How We Think that Organisms Use Genetic and Epigenetic Information
Biological explanations of how genes work in our bodies, and how our bodies develop from their embryonic states, have implications for our self-understanding. Are our bodies essentially products of our genes, biomachines produced by a genetic program, or
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De-Sequencing Identity Work with Genes Edited by Dana Mahr Martina von Arx
Health, Technology and Society
Series Editors Andrew Webster Department of Sociology University of York York, UK Sally Wyatt Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Maastricht University Maastricht, The Netherlands Rebecca Lynch Life Sciences and Medicine King’s College London London, UK Martyn Pickersgill Usher Institute University of Edinburgh Edinburgh, UK
Medicine, health care, and the wider social meaning and management of health are undergoing major changes. In part this reflects developments in science and technology, which enable new forms of diagnosis, treatment and delivery of health care. It also reflects changes in the locus of care and the social management of health. Locating technical developments in wider socio-economic and political processes, each book in the series discusses and critiques recent developments in health technologies in specific areas, drawing on a range of analyses provided by the social sciences. Some have a more theoretical focus, some a more applied focus but all draw on recent research by the authors. The series also looks toward the medium term in anticipating the likely configurations of health in advanced industrial society and does so comparatively, through exploring the globalization and internationalization of health.
More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14875
Dana Mahr · Martina von Arx Editors
De-Sequencing Identity Work with Genes
Editors Dana Mahr Section de Biologie University of Geneva Geneva, Switzerland
Martina von Arx Section de Biologie University of Geneva Geneva, Switzerland
Health, Technology and Society ISBN 978-981-15-7727-7 ISBN 978-981-15-7728-4 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-7728-4
(eBook)
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