Lisa Jean Moore, a medical sociologist, is Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at Purchase College, State University of New York. Her scholarship is located at the intersections of sociology of health and medicine, science and technology studies, feminist studies, animal studies, and critical body studies. She is the author of Sperm Counts: Overcome by Man’s Most Precious Fluid and the co-author of Gendered Bodies: Feminist Perspectives, Missing Bodies: The Politics of Visibility, and Buzz: Urban Beekeeping and the Power of the Bee. Additionally she has co-edited The Body Reader and is a founding co-editor of a successful book series at NYU Press entitled Biopolitics: Medicine, Technoscience, and Health in the 21st Century. Monica J. Casper is Professor and Head of Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Arizona. A sociologist, her scholarly and teaching interests include gender, race, bodies, health, sexuality, disability, and trauma. She has published several books, including the award-winning The Making of the Unborn Patient: A Social Anatomy of Fetal Surgery. Her current research focuses on race and the biopolitics of infant mortality in the U.S. She is a founding co-editor of the NYU Press book series Biopolitics: Medicine, Technoscience, and Health in the 21st Century, as well as a managing editor of The Feminist Wire.
This highly original and exciting textbook significantly updates the sociology of the body while also offering a new style of engagement with readers from many disciplines. A great strength is its accessibility, making available complex theoretical and conceptual analyses of bodies and embodiment through vivid case studies that bring this subject alive and demonstrate its relevance to every aspect of contemporary society. - Professor Sarah Franklin, Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator and Director Reproductive Sociology Research Group (ReproSoc), University of Cambridge Moore and Casper have written a fantastic book. Organized around body parts and functions, the book brilliantly turns anatomy on its head, showing how the body is not stable and natural, but malleable, transformable, and always enmeshed in power relations. It is a superb contribution to the interdisciplinary literature on the body. Absolutely a must read for both scholars and students. - Jonathan Xavier Inda, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, author of Racial Prescriptions: Pharmaceuticals, Difference, and the Politics of Life Fusing the scholar's pen and surgeon's scalpel. The Body exposes the intellectual innards of the most taken-for-granted unit of social life. With verve and originality, the text takes seemingly discrete objects-genes, cells, organs, and more-and carefully situates them within their layered biopolitical contexts. This is essential reading for all those who want conceptual tools to engage, challenge, and reimagine the nature/nurture binary. - Ruha Benjamin, Princeton University, author of People's Science: Bodies and Rights on the Stem Cell Frontier Moore and Casper have successfully taken on the project of fleshing out anatomy to reveal the social and cultural meanings that complicate and partly construct our biological understandings. The Body is firmly situated in critical body studies, read mainly through a sociological perspective but always aware of, and responsive to, the interdisciplinarity of the field. It is a valuable and engaging guide for students and teachers alike. - Margrit Shildrick, Professor of Gender and Knowledge Production, Linkoping University