Search Books
Bluestocking Feminism and B… Poetry Los Angeles: Reading…

The End of Normal: Identity in a Biocultural Era

Author Lennard Davis
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Category Literary Criticism
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
30.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $16.00

✓ Usually ships in 2 to 5 weeks

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)Lennard Davis
ISBN / ASIN0472052020
ISBN-139780472052028
AvailabilityUsually ships in 2 to 5 weeks
Sales Rank747,969
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

In an era when human lives are increasingly measured and weighed in relation to the medical and scientific, notions of what is normal have changed drastically. While it is no longer useful to think of a person s particular race, gender, sexual orientation, or choice as normal, the concept continues to haunt us in other ways. In The End of Normal, Lennard J. Davis explores changing perceptions of body and mind in social, cultural, and political life as the twenty-first century unfolds. The book s provocative essays mine the worlds of advertising, film, literature, and the visual arts as they consider issues of disability, depression, physician-assisted suicide, medical diagnosis, transgender, and other identities.

Using contemporary discussions of biopower and biopolitics, Davis focuses on social and cultural production particularly on issues around the different body and mind. The End of Normal seeks an analysis that works comfortably in the intersection between science, medicine, technology, and culture, and will appeal to those interested in cultural studies, bodily practices, disability, science and medical studies, feminist materialism, psychiatry, and psychology.

Key Concepts in Modernist Literature (Key Concepts: Li…
View
Writing Sri Lanka: Literature, Resistance & the Politi…
View
People Get Ready: African American and Caribbean Cultu…
View
Adelard of Bath Conversatns Nephew (Cambridge Medieval…
View
Graphic Novels: A Bibliographic Guide to Book-Length C…
View
Stephen King A Face Among The Masters
View
Rerouting the Postcolonial
View
Lunar Voices: Of Tragedy, Poetry, Fiction, and Thought
View