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Blood
Blood – this most familiar of fluids carries us beyond biology, through society, myth, and to who we think we are.
Iosifina Foskolou (Edited by), Martin Jones (Edited by)
9781009205498, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 7 July 2022
204 pages
24.4 x 17 x 1.1 cm, 0.42 kg
Blood is life, its complex composition is finely attuned to our vital needs and functions. Blood can also signify death, while 'bloody' is a curse. Arising from the 2021 Darwin College Lectures, this volume invites leading thinkers on the subject to explore the many meanings of blood across a diverse range of disciplines. Through the eyes of artist Marc Quinn, the paradoxical nature of blood plays with the notion of self. Through those of geneticist Walter Bodmer, it becomes a scientific reality: bloodlines and diaspora capture our notions of community. The transfer of blood between bodies, as Rose George relates, can save lives, or as we learn from Claire Roddie can cure cancer. Tim Pedley and Stuart Egginton explore the extraordinary complexity of blood as a critical biological fluid. Sarah Read examines the intimate connection between blood and womanhood, as Carol Senf does in her consideration of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula.
Notes on Contributors
Introduction Iosifina Foskolou and Martin Jones
1. Battle Blood Claire Roddie
2. Transitional Bleeding in Early Modern England Sara Read
3. Blood in Motion, or The Physics of Blood Flow Tim Pedley
4. 'Dracula', Blood, and the New Woman: Stoker's Reflections on the Zeitgeist Carol Senf
5. Blood Lines of the British People Walter Bodmer
6. Heroes and Villains of Blood Rose George
7. Cold Blood: Some Ways by which Animals Cope with Low Temperatures Stuart Egginton
8. Blood Sculptures Marc Quinn
Index.
Subject Areas: Biology, life sciences [PS], Popular science [PDZ], Clinical & internal medicine [MJ], Political ideologies [JPF], Literature & literary studies [D], The arts: general issues [AB]