id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_p3m7vdpo3zgbfmj6f6syx5fea4 JENNY MARIE ALAN H. GOODMAN, DEBORAH HEATH and M. SUSAN LINDEE (eds.), Genetic Nature/Culture: Anthropology and Science beyond the Two-Culture Divide. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2003. Pp. xvii+311. ISBN 0-520-23793-5. £16.95, $24.95 (paperback) 2005.0 2 .pdf application/pdf 983 64 59 SUSAN LINDEE (eds.), Genetic Nature/Culture: knowledge about human genetics and the ways in which people are recruited (or forced) into genetics, in anthropology, and more generally in the power relationships surrounding knowledge. The opening essays use historical cases to investigate the ethics of using people to create Haraway's analysis is considered alongside Lindee's story of a geneticist recruiting people to gain information, it appears that only geneticists can create genetic knowledge, but that they often use whom the knowledge was created for – a second theme that runs throughout the book. While Haraway considers animal genetics in connection with fancying, Franklin looks at that science in the Genetic Nature / Culture: Anthropology and Science Beyond the Two-Culture Divide, Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2003. Himla Soodyall's essays go further, arguing that cultural meanings can be the reason for knowledge formation. This book is not a history of genetics, anthropology or other sciences. ./cache/work_p3m7vdpo3zgbfmj6f6syx5fea4.pdf ./txt/work_p3m7vdpo3zgbfmj6f6syx5fea4.txt