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  1. Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud.Thomas Laqueur - 1992 - Journal of the History of Biology 25 (1):167-168.
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  • Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth: Essential Works of Michel Foucault 1954-1984.Michel Foucault - 2020 - Penguin Group.
    'A fabulous journey through thirty years of political and intellectual ferment... will reorient our reading of Foucault's major works' Didier Eribon The Essential Works of Michel Foucault offers the definitive collection of his articles, interviews and seminars from across thirty years of his extraordinary career. This first volume, Ethics, contains the summaries of Foucault's renowned courses at the Collège de France, as well as key writings and candid interviews on ethical matters: from the role of the intellectual and philosopher in (...)
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  • The Body and Surgery in the Middle Ages.Marie-Christine Pouchelle - 1990 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Largely on the work of Henri de Mondeville.
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  • How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature, and Informatics.N. Katherine Hayles - 1999 - University of Chicago Press.
    In this age of DNA computers and artificial intelligence, information is becoming disembodied even as the "bodies" that once carried it vanish into virtuality. While some marvel at these changes, envisioning consciousness downloaded into a computer or humans "beamed" _Star Trek_-style, others view them with horror, seeing monsters brooding in the machines. In _How We Became Posthuman,_ N. Katherine Hayles separates hype from fact, investigating the fate of embodiment in an information age. Hayles relates three interwoven stories: how information lost (...)
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  • The Order of Things.Michel Foucault - 1970 - Tavistock.
    Like the latter, it unites into one and the same function the possibility of giving things a sign, of representing one thing by another, and the possibility of causing a sign to shift in relation to what it designates. The four functions that define the ...
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  • Anatomy and governmentality: A Foucauldian perspective on death and medicine in modernity.Thomas F. Tierney - 1998 - Theory and Event 2 (1).
    This essay contributes to critical reflection on the extensive role that medicine has played, and continues to play, in establishing and maintaining the uniquely modern form of social order that Foucault described as “governmentality.” It does so by linking Foucault’s later work on governmentality and biopower, from his courses at the Collège de France in the late-1970s, with his early work on the crucial role that pathological anatomy played in founding modern medicine, which was presented in one of his first (...)
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  • Vesalius and human diversity in de humani corporis fabrica.Nancy G. Siraisi - 1994 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 57 (1):60-88.
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  • Matters of Life and Death: The Social and Cultural Conditions of the Rise of Anatomical Theatres, with Special Reference to Seventeenth Century Holland.Jan C. C. Rupp - 1990 - History of Science 28 (3):263-287.
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  • The Fabric of the Body: European Traditions of Anatomical Illustration.K. B. Roberts, J. D. W. Tomlinson, Ann Shelby Blum & Brian J. Ford - 1995 - Journal of the History of Biology 28 (3):545-550.
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  • The Ecstasy of Communication.Jean Baudrillard & Jean-Louis Violeau - 1965 - Semiotext(E).
    This book marks an important evolution in Jean Baudrillard's thought as he leavesbehind his older and better-known concept of the "simulacrum" and tackles the new problem of digitaltechnology acquiring organicity. The resulting world of cold communication and its indifferentalterity, seduction, metamorphoses, metastases, and transparency requires a new form of response.Writing in the shadow of Marshall McLuhan, Baudrillard insists that the content of communication iscompletely without meaning: the only thing that is communicated is communication itself. He sees themasses writhing in an (...)
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  • The second medical revolution: from biomedicine to infomedicine.Laurence Foss - 1987 - [New York, N.Y.]: Distributed in the U.S. by Random House. Edited by Kenneth Rothenberg.
    Examines the philosophical and clinical history of scientific medicine, and critiques the movements in psychoneuroimmunology and holistic and environmental medicine.
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  • Reassessing Foucault: Power, Medicine, and the Body.Colin Jones & Roy Porter - 1994 - Psychology Press.
    This study sets out to examine the implications of Foucault's work for students and researchers in a wide selection of areas in the social and human sciences.
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  • The Discursive Formation of the Body in the History of Medicine.David Michael Levin - 1990 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 15 (5):515.
    The principal argument of the present paper is that the human body is as much a reflective formation of multiple discourses as it is an effect of natural and environmental processes. This paper examines the implications of this argument, and suggests that recognizing the body in this light can be illuminating, not only for our conception of the body, but also for our understanding of medicine. Since medicine is itself a discursive formation, a science with both a history, and a (...)
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  • The Platonic origins of anatomy.Christopher E. Cosans - 1995 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 38 (4):581.
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