Skip to product information
1 of 1

Rutgers University Press

Recovering the Nation's Body: Cultural Memory, Medicine, and the Politics of Redemption

Recovering the Nation's Body: Cultural Memory, Medicine, and the Politics of Redemption

Regular price €58,95 EUR
Regular price Sale price €58,95 EUR
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Format
Quantity

The body is both a site for medical practice and a source of therapeutic and scientific tools. As such, there are a variety of meanings ascribed to the body which both affect and are affected by cultural, economic, political and legal complexities. In order to access and use body parts, Linda F. Hogle states, transformative scientific and cultural processes are brought into play. Nowhere is this more evident than present-day Germany, where the spectre of Nazi medical experimentation still plays a large role in national policies governing the use of body parts and the way these policies are put into practice. In their efforts to be perceived as not repeating atrocities of the past, German medical practitioners and policy-makers reformulate ideas of bodily violation. To further confuse the issue, the reunification of East and West Germany has engendered new questions about the relationship between individuals' bodies, science, and the state.

Hogle shows how "universal" medicine is reinterpreted through the lens of national and transnational politics and history, using comparative examples from her research in the United. States. Recovering the Nation's Body is the first book to analyze the actual practices involved in procuring human tissue, and the first to examine how the German past and the unique present-day situation within the European Union are key in understanding the form that medical practices take within various contexts.



Author: Linda F. Hogle
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Published: 09/01/1999
Pages: 262
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.80lbs
Size: 9.01h x 6.04w x 0.65d
ISBN: 9780813526454

About the Author
Linda F. Hogle is a fellow at the Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics. She has written widely on the anthropology of science and on bioethics and cultural diversity.

View full details