中古品:
¥4,814 税込
配送料 ¥257 6月23日-7月4日にお届け(7 時間 21 分以内にご注文の場合)
詳細を見る
中古商品: 非常に良い | 詳細
発売元 Paper Cavalier JP
コンディション: 中古商品: 非常に良い
コメント: 少し使用感あり。 海外からの発送のため、2—4週間程度でお手元に商品をお届けします。商品及びサービス等の質問は、日本語で対応いたします。
Kindleアプリのロゴ画像

無料のKindleアプリをダウンロードして、スマートフォン、タブレット、またはコンピューターで今すぐKindle本を読むことができます。Kindleデバイスは必要ありません

ウェブ版Kindleなら、お使いのブラウザですぐにお読みいただけます。

携帯電話のカメラを使用する - 以下のコードをスキャンし、Kindleアプリをダウンロードしてください。

KindleアプリをダウンロードするためのQRコード

著者をフォロー

何か問題が発生しました。後で再度リクエストしてください。

Culturing Life: How Cells Became Technologies ハードカバー – 2007/2/28

3.7 5つ星のうち3.7 4個の評価

商品の説明

レビュー

In Culturing Life: How Cells Became Technologies, Landecker offers a history of the development of cell culture in biology that is sparkling with originality and insight. She has an anthropologist's eye for nodes of cultural significance even as her narrative arc is deeply historical. The book weaves a rich tapestry of biological, historical, and cultural connections.
--Angela N. H. Creager, Associate Professor of History, Princeton University

Landecker hits exactly the right balance of interpretive analysis and presentation of substance. Her stories carry the more technical descriptions so that both are motivated and compelling. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book and, moreover, I found it exciting.
--Jane Maienschein, Regents' Professor and Parents Association Professor of Biology and Society

Culturing Life is a beautifully written, lucid account of the history of tissue culture, a technology that permits the isolation of cells from bodies, their continuous reproduction, and global distribution as immortalized cell lines. Landecker draws us into a world where the limits of biological plasticity are continually tested, cell fusion and cloning are commonplace, and biological time is transcended--in short, technological manipulation has forever transformed what it is to be biological. This book will rapidly become indispensable reading in the field of science and technology studies.
--Margaret Lock, author of
Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death

In our age of cloning and stem cells, Landecker's challenging study does a real service as it locates the techniques and ideas, developed through time, which make these cell manipulations possible. Landecker charts the uncertain movement of cells from organisms (including humans) to the laboratory, moving beyond cell cultures to the expectations of biologists and to the philosophical and ethical issues that emerge as control over life becomes possible. Others have written histories of cell theory; here Landecker recovers the story of the cell practices that have transformed what we mean by
life.
--Everett Mendelsohn, Harvard University

A mere century ago, scientists didn't know how to culture cells in a medium and believed that cells couldn't live outside their parent organism. As Landecker reminds us, today we can hardly live without cell cultures, which are used for everything from routine medical tests to genetic engineering...She is a keen observer of scientific practice. (
Publishers Weekly 2006-11-13)

The discovery that it was possible to grow cells in a lab dish transformed them from being the immutable building blocks of individual bodies into plastic, malleable resources with a life of their own. In
Culturing Life, anthropologist Hannah Landecker skillfully interweaves the scientific, historical, and cultural aspects of this transformation, and examines how cell culture challenges humanity's notions of individuality and immortality...An insightful and thought-provoking perspective on how technology has changed scientists' and society's understanding of life.
--Claire Ainsworth (
New Scientist 2007-02-24)

In the flood of instant comment on cloning and stem cells, we need the longer and deeper views of cellular technologies that only history can provide. Historians of science have written much about the nineteenth-century advent of cell theory, but genes and molecules stole the limelight in the twentieth...
Culturing Life by Hannah Landecker is a small book that does much to fill that large gap...[An] original book...[A] stimulating reconstruction of the cultures that gave us cultured cells.
--Nick Hopwood (
Nature 2007-03-08)

Few laymen realize that scientists first fused cells from different species as far back as the 1960s, as Ms. Landecker describes...The level-headedness that can be gained from historical perspective is the value in reading Ms. Landecker's account. (
The Economist 2007-03-31)

Hannah Landecker's fascinating, beautifully written account of the history of cell culture restores the sense of wonder felt by the first scientists who grew living cells apart from organisms and by the people who read about their achievements in scientific journals, popular magazines, and newspapers. But this book does much more than that; it sheds a unique light on the history of biology in the 20th century, the rise of biotechnology, and our understanding of what life is...By reflecting on the catastrophic, artificial, and radically new variety of life that arises in the laboratory, Landecker opens new ways to articulate the ideas of the French philosopher of science Georges Canguilhem about the distinction between the normal and the pathologic. Cultured cells bring into question our understanding of the biologic, but their infinite plasticity, as Landecker eloquently shows, often unfolds in the normative space of medicine.
--Ilana Löwy (
New England Journal of Medicine)

With her book
Culturing Life, Hannah Landecker contributes an important chapter to the recent history of laboratory fractals. Her elegantly written and well-documented narrative demonstrates how, within 20th-century biological laboratories, a whole range of vessels and containers were used in order to store, breed, study, and manipulate cells and tissue outside the body of organic individuals: from hanging-drop preparations in the 1910s to tissue culture flasks in the 1930s and powerful freezers in the 1950s and 1960s....The great merit of this book is its demonstration that these spaces of knowledge also create and imply specific regimes of temporality.
--Henning Schmidgen (
Project Muse Scholoary Journals Online)

Hannah Landecker provides a wonderful assortment of descriptions of experimental design, ‘eureka’-type moments in the lab and the scientists responsible for initiating this new technology during the early 1900s, along with its evolution to the present...Well-written historical accounts of scientific discovery allow the reader to appreciate the adversities confronting the scientists involved and the circumstances that drove their discoveries and to wonder what may happen next.
Culturing Life is no exception.
--Kendall L. Knight (
Nature Publishing Group Book Review)

In this thoughtful, often elegant book, Hannah Landecker bridges the histories of science, medicine, and technology as she explores how cells were domesticated to the laboratory...She argues persuasively that appreciating the subtleties of cell culture history enables us to think more clearly and more deeply about current biotechnology.
Culturing Life, then, is a fine example of “translational” historical research.
--Nathaniel Comfort (
Project Muse Scholoary Journals Online)

Well-written historical accounts of scientific discovery allow the reader to appreciate the adversities confronting the scientists involved and the circumstances that drove their discoveries and to wonder what may happen next.
Culturing Life is no exception.
--Kendall L. Knight (
Nature Medicine 2008-07-01)

著者について

Hannah Landecker is Associate Professor of Sociology at University of California, Los Angeles.

登録情報

  • 出版社 ‏ : ‎ Harvard University Press; Annotated版 (2007/2/28)
  • 発売日 ‏ : ‎ 2007/2/28
  • 言語 ‏ : ‎ 英語
  • ハードカバー ‏ : ‎ 288ページ
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0674023285
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0674023284
  • 寸法 ‏ : ‎ 14.61 x 3.18 x 22.23 cm
  • カスタマーレビュー:
    3.7 5つ星のうち3.7 4個の評価

著者について

著者をフォローして、新作のアップデートや改善されたおすすめを入手してください。
Hannah Landecker
Brief content visible, double tap to read full content.
Full content visible, double tap to read brief content.

著者の本をもっと発見したり、よく似た著者を見つけたり、著者のブログを読んだりしましょう

カスタマーレビュー

星5つ中3.7つ
5つのうち3.7つ
4グローバルレーティング

この商品をレビュー

他のお客様にも意見を伝えましょう

上位レビュー、対象国: 日本

日本からの0件のレビューとお客様による0件の評価があります

他の国からのトップレビュー

すべてのレビューを日本語に翻訳
Enrique Juarez Aguilar
5つ星のうち4.0 Culturing Life: How Cells Became Technologies (English Edition)
2020年10月15日にメキシコでレビュー済み
Amazonで購入