05.12.2012 Views

Isis Current Bibliography 2006, Vol. 97 - History of Science Society

Isis Current Bibliography 2006, Vol. 97 - History of Science Society

Isis Current Bibliography 2006, Vol. 97 - History of Science Society

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

164 375. Twentieth century after 1950<br />

<strong>Science</strong>, Social Welfare, and the Divergent Biotech<br />

Policy Landscapes in Europe and the United States.”<br />

Sci. Cult. 12 (2003): 375–414.<br />

3610. LEE, Henry C., and Frank TIRNADY. Blood<br />

Evidence: How DNA Is Revolutionizing the Way<br />

We Solve Crimes. (xxx + 418 pp.; bibl.; index.)<br />

Cambridge, Mass.: Perseus Publishing, 2003. ISBN:<br />

0738206024.<br />

3611. LEZAUN, Javier. “Creating a New Object <strong>of</strong><br />

Government: Making Genetically Modified Organisms<br />

Traceable.” Soc. Stud. Sci. 36 (<strong>2006</strong>): 499–531.<br />

3612. M’CHAREK, Amade. “The Mitochondrial Eve<br />

<strong>of</strong> Modern Genetics: Of Peoples and Genomes, or the<br />

Routinization <strong>of</strong> Race.” Special issue on Postcolonial<br />

Technoscience. Sci. Cult. 14 (2005): 161–183.<br />

About the Human Genome Diversity Project.<br />

3613. MORGAN, Gregory J. “The Beauty <strong>of</strong> Symmetrical<br />

Design: The Alleged Epistemic Role <strong>of</strong><br />

Aesthetic Value in Theoretical <strong>Science</strong>.” Diss. Abstr.<br />

Int. A 65/12 (2005): 4590.<br />

Dissertation at The Johns Hopkins University, 2005. Adviser:<br />

Achinstein, Peter. UMI pub. no. 3157792. 272 pp.<br />

Philosophical analysis using a case study <strong>of</strong> two theories <strong>of</strong><br />

virus structure—the 1956 Crick-Watson theory and the 1962<br />

Caspar-Klug theory.<br />

3614. NERLICH, Brigitte, Susan JOHNSON, and<br />

David D. CLARKE. “The First ‘Designer Baby’: The<br />

Role <strong>of</strong> Narratives, Clichés and Metaphors in the Year<br />

2000 Media Debate.” Sci. Cult. 12 (2003): 471–498.<br />

3615. O’MAHONY, Patrick, and Mike Steffen<br />

SCHÄFER. “The ‘Book <strong>of</strong> Life’ in the Press: Comparing<br />

German and Irish Media Discourse on Human<br />

Genome Research.” Soc. Stud. Sci. 35 (2005): 99–<br />

130.<br />

3616. OLBY, Robert. “Why Celebrate the Golden<br />

Jubilee <strong>of</strong> the Double Helix?” Endeavour 27 (2003):<br />

80–84.<br />

3617. PRAINSACK, Barbara. “ ‘Negotiating Life’:<br />

The Regulation <strong>of</strong> Human Cloning and Embryonic<br />

Stem Cell Research in Israel.” Soc. Stud. Sci. 36<br />

(<strong>2006</strong>): 173–205.<br />

3618. PRIEST, Susanna Hornig. “The Public Opinion<br />

Climate for Gene Technologies in Canada and<br />

the United States: Competing Voices, Contrasting<br />

Frames.” Public Underst. Sci. 15 (<strong>2006</strong>): 55–71.<br />

3619. RABINOW, Paul, and Talia DAN-COHEN. A<br />

Machine to Make a Future: Biotech Chronicles. (199<br />

pp.; ill.; bibl.) Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press,<br />

2005. ISBN: 0691120501.<br />

Reviews: [ref. 487]<br />

3620. RATTO, Matt. “Foundations and Pr<strong>of</strong>iles:<br />

Splicing Metaphors in Genetic Databases and<br />

Biobanks.” Public Underst. Sci. 15 (<strong>2006</strong>): 31–53.<br />

3621. REARDON, Jenny. Race to the Finish: Identity<br />

and Governance in an Age <strong>of</strong> Genomics. In-formation<br />

Series. (xii + 237 pp.; bibl.; index.) Princeton, N.J.:<br />

Princeton Univ. Press, 2005. ISBN: 0691118574.<br />

On the international politics and social controversy over the<br />

Human Genome Diversity Project, an effort to use genetics<br />

to explore isolated indigenous populations. Reviews:<br />

[ref. R750]<br />

3622. SGARAMELLA, Vittorio. “Human Cloning:<br />

Mission Futile, Dangerous or Impossible?” Hist.<br />

Phil. Life Sci. 25 (2003): 81–91.<br />

3623. SHOSTAK, Sara. “The Emergence <strong>of</strong> Toxicogenomics:<br />

A Case Study <strong>of</strong> Molecularization.”<br />

Soc. Stud. Sci. 35 (2005): 367–403.<br />

3624. STRAUSS, Bernard S. “Rosy and Jim: The<br />

Mystery <strong>of</strong> the Double Helix.” Perspect. Biol. Med.<br />

47 (2004): 443–449.<br />

Essay review <strong>of</strong> Brenda MADDOX, Rosalind Franklin (2002);<br />

Victor K. MCELHENY, Watson and DNA (2003).<br />

3625. WEBER, Bruce H., and John N. PREBBLE.<br />

“An Issue <strong>of</strong> Originality and Priority: The Correspondence<br />

and Theories <strong>of</strong> Oxidative Phosphorylation <strong>of</strong><br />

Peter Mitchell and Robert J.P. Williams, 1961–1980.”<br />

J. Hist. Biol. 39 (<strong>2006</strong>): 125–163.<br />

3626. WITKOWSKI, Jan. (Ed.) The Inside Story:<br />

DNA to RNA to Protein. (xviii + 382 pp.; ill.) Woodbury,<br />

N.Y.: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press,<br />

2005. ISBN: 08796<strong>97</strong>504.<br />

Includes sections on The Biochemical Era; Origins <strong>of</strong><br />

Molecular Biology; The Double Helix; Replication; DNA<br />

Molecules; DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis; Sequencing;<br />

and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Reviews:<br />

[ref. R993]<br />

3627. YOUNT, Lisa. Biotechnology and Genetic<br />

Engineering. Rev. ed. Library in a Book. (316 pp.;<br />

bibl.; index.) New York: Facts On File, 2004. ISBN:<br />

08160505<strong>97</strong>.<br />

Secondary school textbook. Includes discussion <strong>of</strong> biotechnology<br />

and the law, appendices on specific legal cases, and<br />

annotated bibliography.<br />

375-135. PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY; HUMAN<br />

BIOLOGY<br />

3628. BRUNING, Susan B. “Complex Legal Legacies:<br />

The Native American Graves Protection and<br />

Repatriation Act, Scientific Study, and Kennewick<br />

Man.” Amer. Antiq. 71 (<strong>2006</strong>): 501–521.<br />

375-136. NEUROSCIENCES<br />

3629. BEAULIEU, Anne. “From Brainbank to<br />

Database: The Informational Turn in the Study <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Brain.” Special Issue: The Brain in a Vat [ref. 142].<br />

Stud. Hist. Phil. Biol. Biomed. Sci. 35 (2004): 367–<br />

390.<br />

Explores two types <strong>of</strong> data collection: post-mortem brain<br />

collections and digital brain atlases.<br />

3630. CHU, Nai-Shin. “Contribution <strong>of</strong> a Snake<br />

Venom Toxin to Myasthenia Gravis: The Discovery<br />

<strong>of</strong> α-bungarotoxin in Taiwan.” J. Hist. Neurosci. 14<br />

(2005): 138–148.<br />

3631. GERE, Cathy. “Thought in a Vat: Thinking<br />

Through Annie Cattrell.” Special Issue: The Brain in<br />

a Vat [ref. 142]. Stud. Hist. Phil. Biol. Biomed. Sci.<br />

35 (2004): 415–436.<br />

“Cattrell’s series <strong>of</strong> sculptures ‘Sense’ render in three dimensions<br />

MRI scans <strong>of</strong> different sensory functions in the human<br />

brain.” (from the abstract)<br />

3632. GOETZ, Christopher G. “Charcot in Contemporary<br />

Literature.” J. Hist. Neurosci. 15 (<strong>2006</strong>):<br />

22–30.<br />

375-137. PSYCHOLOGY AND COMPARATIVE<br />

PSYCHOLOGY<br />

3633. AUSTIN, Stephanie. “The Influence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Feminist Movement In/On the <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Psychology.”<br />

Diss. Abstr. Int. B 66/01 (2005): 541.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!