ABSTRACT

Wild Science investigates the world-wide boom in 'health culture'. While self-help health books and medical dramas are popular around the globe, we are bombarded with daily media images of DNA research, and news reports about cloning, the fight against AIDS, cancer and depression. With popular culture now the principal means through which the non-scientific population encounters science why do certain images of science get promoted above others?
Contributors examine the public meanings of science, revealing the frictions and contradictions within popular representations of what medicine can and should do. Focusing on the visual culture of medicine, they show how representations of science have a direct impact on popular perceptions of the limits of science, and ultimately on health education, funding and research, and examine the belief that media literacy in popular representations of medicine makes an ethical public discourse on the aims of science possible.
With sections addressing the new visual technologies which make the human body into a virtual territory, the diagnostic and medical practices centered around women's bodies, and popular debates around genetics and identity, Wild Science argues that science is a practice bound in values and institutions, and argues for a responsible engagement with the public cultures of science and health.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part 1|46 pages

Corporeal maps

chapter 2|15 pages

The Visible Human Project

Data into flesh, flesh into data

chapter 3|14 pages

The Brain at the End of the Rainbow

The promises of brain scans in the research field and in the media

part 2|49 pages

Genetic Codifications

chapter 4|11 pages

David Suzuki's the Secret of Life

Informatics and the popular discourse of the life code

chapter 5|14 pages

The Language and Literature of Life

Popular metaphors in genome research

chapter 6|22 pages

What Made Ellen (and Anne) Gay?

Feminist critique of popular and scientific beliefs

part 3|79 pages

Clinical Practices

chapter 7|15 pages

Pygmalions in Plastic Surgery

Medical stories, masculine stories 1

chapter 9|12 pages

Screening Bodies, Assigning Meaning

ER and the technology of HIV testing

chapter 10|16 pages

Complications

An analysis of medical abortions in the US

chapter 11|15 pages

Mothers, Monsters and Family Values

Assisted reproduction and the aging natural body 1

part 4|59 pages

Feminist Science Studies

chapter 12|30 pages

Teaching in the Belly of the Beast

Feminism in the Best of all Places

chapter 14|6 pages

Letter to a Graduate Student