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Social Bodies: Science, Reproduction, And Italian Modernity (princeton Studies In Culture/power/history)

معرفی کتاب «Social Bodies: Science, Reproduction, And Italian Modernity (princeton Studies In Culture/power/history)» نوشتهٔ David G. Horn، منتشرشده توسط نشر Princeton University Press در سال 1995. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

Annotation Using as his example post-World War I Italy and the government's interest in the size, growth rate, and "vitality" of its national population, David Horn suggests a genealogy for our present understanding of procreation as a site for technological intervention and political contestation. Social Bodies looks at how population and reproductive bodies came to be the objects of new sciences, technologies, and government policies during this period. It examines the linked scientific constructions of Italian society as a body threatened by the "disease" of infertility, and of women and men as social bodies--located neither in nature nor in the private sphere, but in that modern domain of knowledge and intervention carved out by statistics, sociology, social hygiene, and social work. Situated at the intersection of anthropology, cultural studies, and feminist studies of science, the book explores the interrelated factors that produced the practices of reason we call social science and social planning. David Horn draws on many sources to analyze the discourses and practices of "social experts," the resistance these encountered, and the often unintended effects of the new objectification of bodies and populations. He shows how science, while affirming that maternity was part of woman's "nature," also worked to remove reproduction from the domain of the natural, making it an object of technological intervention. This reconstitution of bodies through the sciences and technologies of the social, Horn argues, continues to have material consequences for women and men throughout the West Annotation "This book is at once a study of the emergence of reproduction and welfare as the subjects of the new social sciences and government social engineering in interwar Italy and, at the same time, a history of the constitution of the 'social' as an object of study and intervention. A significant contribution to feminist and cultural studies."--Sylvia Yanagisako, Stanford University Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- CHAPTER I. Technologies of Reproduction -- CHAPTER II. Social Bodies -- CHAPTER III. The Power of Numbers -- CHAPTER IV. Governing Reproduction -- CHAPTER V. The Sterile City -- CHAPTER VI. Beyond Public and Private -- Notes -- References Cited -- Index. Using as a case study the government of post-World War I Italy's interest in the size and growth rate of its population, this study suggests a genealogy for our present understanding of procreation as an issue for technical intervention and political conflict. IN THE LATE TWENTIETH CENTURY, the status of the "social" as an object of scientific knowledge (including anthropological knowledge) and of technical interventions is so familiar as to risk being taken for granted.
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