Politics and the Human Body: Assault on Dignity

Portada
Jean Bethke Elshtain, J. Timothy Cloyd
Vanderbilt University Press, 1995 - 323 páginas
Picturesque America was a conspicuous presence in the popular culture of the United States in the post-Civil War years. First published as a magazine series in Appletons' Journal, then as a subscription book, in parts, from 1872 to 1874 it reached a huge audience. Its voluminous text and over 900 pictures represented the first comprehensive celebration of the entire continental nation. By testifying to the variety, uniqueness and potential wealth of the American landscape and the advanced civilization of its cities, Picturesque America laid the foundation for a resurgence of nationalism rooted in the homeland itself, rather than in institutions of democracy as would have been the case earlier in the century. This study is the first to analyze in detail the images and messages it conveyed and why and how it was produced, paying special attention to the misconceptions surrounding William Cullen Bryant's role as "editor," the contributions of particular illustrators of the day, and the book's production history.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

The New Eugenics and Feminist Quandaries
23
The Dream of the Human Genome
41
The Matter of Baby M
67
A Reflection on Pain and Embodiment
140
Organs for Sale? Propriety Property
153
The Case for Commerce in Organ Transplantation
176
Four
193
Selling Student Bodies
211
A Study of Political Excess
226
Torture Human Rights and the Body
243
Authority Alienation
258
Notes
293
List of Contributors
317
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Acerca del autor (1995)

Jean Bethke Elshtain has written extensively on political philosophy, feminism, reproductive technology, the family, and the ethics of political and social thought and action. Her ten books include Women, Militarism, and War, The Family in Political Thought, and Just War Theory. She currently serves as Laura Spellman Rockefeller Chair of Social and Political Ethics at the University of Chicago. J. Timothy Cloyd earned his Ph.D. at the University of Massachusetts in 1991. He served as Coordinator for the Program in Social and Political Thought at Vanderbilt University from 1991 to 1994.

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