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Anthropology and the new genetics
"The growth of "new genetics" has dramatically increased our understanding of health, diseases, and the body. Anthropologists argue that these scientific advances have also had far-reaching social and cultural implications, radically challenging our self-understanding and our perception of what it means to be human: that we have become "biomedicalized," fragmented and commodified - thus redefining our notions of citizenship, social relations, family, and identity. Anthropology and the New Genetics shows how anthropology can contribute to and challenge the ways we have come to understand genetic issues. Exploring a range of issues and case studies in human genetic research, it provides an ethnographic "reality check," arguing that we must look beyond the "gene-centrism" of genetic codes, family trees, and insular populations, to explore their wider cultural, ethical, and philosophical...
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