Blood cultures : medicine, media, and militarisms / Cathy Hannabach, independent scholar, USA.
- Hannabach, Cathy
- Date:
- 2015
- Books
About this work
Description
"Blood Cultures traces the cultural history of blood as it enabled the twentieth-century American empire. Spilling blood, managing blood, banking blood, and even sucking blood defined the nation and its practices, from Alcatraz Island to Guantanamo Bay. Bringing together science studies, pop culture, and anti-racist feminist and queer politics, the book examines how blood saturated the twentieth-century cultural imaginary, slipped into laws and policies, flowed across screens, and seeped into our most intimate relationships"-- Provided by publisher.
Publication/Creation
New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
Physical description
viii, 153 pages ; 23 cm.
Series
Contributors
Edition
First edition.
Bibliographic information
Includes bibliographical references (pages 125-138) and index.
Contents
Introduction -- Bleeding Identities: The Racial and Sexual Politics of Blood Drive Activism -- Cartographies of Blood and Violence -- Technologies of Blood: The Biopolitics of Asylum -- Between Blood and the Bomb: Atomic Cities, Nuclear Kinship, and Queer Vampires -- Conclusion: Sanguinary Futures.
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicineGY.TOpen shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9781137581587
- 1137581581