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SUNY Buffalo | DMS 434
 
 

91 sample documents related to DMS 434

  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    REPTILICUS ERECTUS 1.1 Aliens in the form of erect reptilian bipeds visit the earth. They hold a conference to discuss the fossil remains of an extinct mammalian biped known as Homo sapiens. These intelligent dinosauroids might find us as puzzling t
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    EIGHTEEN Postmodern Procreation: A Cultural Account of Assisted Reproduction Sarah Franklin What is in crisis here is the symbolic order, the conceptualisation of the relationship between nature and culture such that one can talk about the one thro
     
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    Cyborgs and Space L1.2 Altering man\'s bodily functions to meet the requirements of extraterrestrial environments would be more logical than providing an earthly environment for him in space . Artifact-organism systems which would extend man\'s uncon
     
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    CHARLES JENCKS Post-Modernism and Discontinuity EVER SINCE ROBERT VENTURI CELEBRATED the notion of contradiction in architecture (1966) the idea of discontinuity has been a conscious tactic of Post-Modernists. Even before this, in the late 1950s, Po
     
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    Bioethics ISSN 0269-9702 Volume I Number 1 1987 DO HUMAN CELLS HAVE RIGHTS?* MARY WARNOCK The British Government\'s Committee of Inquiry into Human Fertilization and Embryology, of which I was Chairman, recommended that research using human embryos
     
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    DINOTOPIA: THE NEWT WORLD ORDER LIKE BEAST FABLES of any kind, dinosaur stories are really about human beings. Either the dinosaurs must be treated as if they were human, or they must be brought into some kind of encounter with human beings as an ali
     
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    221 Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, 14 (1990): 215-221 The Development of Aesthetic Facial Surgery in Japan: As Seen Through a Study of Japanese Pictorial Art Yukio Shirakabe, M.D. Tokyo,Japan Abstract. A study of pictorial art in Japan reveals a basic
     
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    179 Shooting the Mother: Fetal Photography and the Politics of Disappearance Carol A. Stabile what name shall we call our selves now our mother is gone? Audre Lorde, \"Harriet\"1 Mommy Dearest By late 1991, what Rosalind Petchesky had once described a
     
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    116 CHAPTER FIVE The Virtual Body in Cyberspace This chapter speculates about the body on the electronic frontier. In one sense, this frontier is an imaginary construction that identifies a horizon of contemporary cultural thought. But in another se
     
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    VESTED INTERESTS CROSS-DRESSING & CULTURAL ANXIETY MARJORIE GARBER Harper Perennial A Division of Harper Collins Publishers Spare Parts 4 SPARE PARTS: THE SURGICAL CONSTRUCTION OF GENDER The Maserati I picked up in Modena was a reconditioned mod
     
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    1 Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative by Judith Butler (Routledge, 185 pp., $17.99) The Psychic Life of Power: Theories in Subjection by Judith Butler (Stanford University Press, 218 pp., $14.95) Bodies that Matter: On the Discursive Li
     
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    1 Judith Butler, Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of \"Sex\" (New York; Routledge, 1993) INTRODUCTION Why should our bodies end at the skin, or include at best other beings encapsulated by skin? Donna Haraway, A Manifesto for Cyborgs If o
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    1 INTRODUCTION In a special preview of the year 2000 and beyond, the February 1989 issue of LIFE magazine (figure 1) featured an article called \"Visions of Tomorrow,\" which includes a report on the replacement body parts that are already available i
     
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    Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (Durham, NC; Duke University Press, 1991), pp. .55-66. 2 Theories of the Postmodern The problem of postmodernism how its fundamental characteristics are to be described, whethe
     
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    Human Reproduction, Emerging Technologies, and Conflicting Rights Robert Blank University of Canterbury Janna C. Merrick University of South Florida CQ PRESS A Division of Congressional Quarterly Inc. Washington, D.C. Chapter Four 84 C H A P
     
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    127 Slavoj iek, The Plague of Fantasies (London; Verso, 1997) Cyberspace, Or, The Unbearable Closure of Being What is a symptom? When one is dealing with a universal structuring principle, one always automatically assumes that - in principle, preci
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Reality is Bleeding: A Brief History of Film from the 16th Century1 William Egginton The past several years has seen a surge in the number of films that call into question the nature of the reality represented within the diagetic borders of the scree
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Vol 303 No. 17 THE NEW MEDICAL-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX-RELMAN 963 SPECIAL ARTICLE THE NEW MEDICAL-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX ARNOLD S. RELMAN, M.D. Abstract: The most important health-care development of the day is the recent, relatively unheralded rise of a h
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    The Machine as Means and End: The Clinical Introduction of the Artificial Heart STANLEY J. REISER INTRODUCTION Living on the brink of the Scientific Revolution, English physician and anatomist William Harvey wrote: \"Nature herself is to be addressed;
     
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    27 Judith Butler BODIES THAT MATTER: On the Discursive Limits of \"Sex\" (New York: Routledge, 1993) Chapter 1: BODIES THAT MATTER If I understand deconstruction, deconstruction is not an exposure of error, certainly not other people\'s error. The crit
     
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    1 Hayles N. Katherine Hayles English Department University of California Los Angeles CA 90095-1530 The Power of Simulation: What Virtual Creatures Can Teach Us Yearning for the light, the creatures struggle after it. In water they grow tails and lear
     
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    C H A P T E R 8 Issues in Fetal and Embryo Research An extension of the debate over reproductive rights and of the conflict among various interests in human reproduction centers on the utilization of human embryos and fetuses for research an
     
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    Encouraging Altruism: Public Attitudes and the Marketing of Organ Donation JEFFREY M. PROTTAS University Health Policy Consortium, Brandeis University MEDICAL ADVANCES OF SEVERAL SORTS HAVE, OVER the last ten years, made the transplantation of huma
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    17 CHAPTER ONE Reading Cyborgs, Writing Feminism: Reading the Body in Contemporary Culture Well I stopped in at the body shop I said to the guy, I want stereo FM installed in my teeth. And take this mole off my back and put it on my cheek. And while
     
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    57 Judith Butler, Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of \"Sex\" (New York; Routledge, 1993) THE LESBIAN PHALLUS AND THE MORPHOLOGICAL IMAGINARY The Lacanian\'s desire clearly to separate phallus from penis, to control the meaning of the signi
     
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    Conceiving the New World Order The Global Politics of Reproduction EDITED BY Faye D. Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley Los Angeles London 151 THE \"EMPIRE\" STRIKES BACK: A POSTTRANSSEXUAL MANIFESTO Sandy Stone Depart
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Thanks to new techniques, cosmetic surgeons say they have become artists, able to shape human flesh as finely as Michelangelo crafted marble. PETER JARET investigates whether surgery really can make it possible to get a perfect body, PHOTOGRAPIED BY
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    SPARE PARTS Organ Replacement in American Society RENEE C. FOX and JUDITH P. SWAZEY with the assistance of Judith C. Watkins New York Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1992 3 Alterations in the Theme of the Gift Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, as de
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Stelarc: The Evolutionary Alchemy of Reason (AN EXCERPT) BRIAN MASSUMl \"What is important is the body as an object, not a subject-not being a particular someone but rather becoming something else.\" \"Information is the prosthesis that props up the o
     
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    Commentaries Life or Death The Issue of Payment in Cadaveric Organ Donation In 1989, 1878 people died while awaiting organ transplantation. Public awareness programs, professional education, and legislation have not increased organ donation; the mot
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Bioethics ISSN 0269-9702 Volume 1 Number 4 1987 A COMMERCIAL MARKET FOR ORGANS? WHY NOT PRANLAL MANGA INTRODUCTION Organ transplantation is widely acknowledged as offering hope-often the only hope-for thousands of desperately ill patients. Advances
     
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    The Desire to Be Wired Immersive technology represents both the grail at the end of the history of cinema and the beacon that draws creative energies toward the culmination of computing. It replaces the traditional ethos of computing-bodiless minds
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    119 Scott Bukatman, Terminal Identity: The Virtual Subject in Postmodern Science Fiction (Durham, NC; Duke University Press, 1993), pp. 119-137. CYBERSPACE instead of being made of natural materials, such as marble, granite, or other kinds of roc
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Bioethics ISSN 0269-9702 Volume I Number 2 1987 Should Foetuses Or Infants Be Utilized As Organ Donors? Arthur L. Caplan I. THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM The attempt to transplant the heart of a baboon into the chest of a human infant at Loma Linda Uni
     
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    The Virtual Surgeon Timothy Lenoir Stanford University In the past decade computers have entered the operating room to assist physicians in realizing a dream they\'ve pursued ever since Claude Bernard: to make medicine both experimental and predictiv
     
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    3 Gilles Deleuze Felix Guattari A Thousand Plateaus (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987) tr. Brian Massumi 1. Introduction: Rhizome The two of us wrote Anti-Oedipus together. Since each of us was several, there was already quite a cr
     
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    3 Subversive Bodily Acts i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva Kristeva\'s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a specifically feminine locus of subversion
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    GENDER IS BURNING: QUESTIONS OF APPROPRIATION AND SUBVERSION We all have friends who, when they knock on the door and we ask, through the door, the question, \"Who\'s there?,\" answer (since \"it\'s obvious\") \"It\'s me.\" And we recognize that \"it is him,\"
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    THE LAST DINOSTORY: AS TOLD BY HIMSELF ALL THE STORIES about dinosaurs that we have looked at so far are told about an alien, exotic, and monstrous beast from a human point of view, which is of course understandable. But there are some stories that a
     
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    7 Eggs, Embryos and Foetuses: Anxiety and the Law Janet Gallagher The story broke in the American press in June 1984: Mario and Elsa Rios, a wealthy Los Angeles couple killed in a plane crash, had left behind two frozen embryos at a fertility clinic
     
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    David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity: An Inquiry into the Conditions of Cultural Change (Oxford; Blackwell, 1989), pp. 125-140. 8 Fordism The symbolic initiation date of Fordism must, surely, be 1914, when Henry Ford introduced his five-doll
     
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    David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity: An Inquiry into the Conditions of Cultural Change (Oxford; Blackwell, 1989), pp. 141-172 9 From Fordism to flexible accumulation In retrospect, it seems there were signs of serious problems within Fordis
     
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    David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity: An Inquiry into the Conditions of Cultural Change (Oxford; Blackwell, 1989), pp. 173-188. 10 Theorizing the transition To the degree that we are witnessing a historical transition, still far from complet
     
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    Wednesday, January 30, 2002 Scientific American: Feature Article: The Unexpected Science to Come.: December 1999 Page: 1 The Unexpected Science to Come. The most important discoveries of the next 50 years are likely to be ones of which we cannot n
     
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    133 C H A P T E R 6 Prenatal Intervention: Choosing the Characteristics of Unborn Children Earlier chapters have focused on the right to have children and the conflicts that arise in assisted reproduction and surrogacy. This chapter is conc
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    TWENTY-ONE The Body as Property: A Feminist Re-vision Rosalind Pollack Petchesky Reproductive politics is in large part about language and the contestation of meanings. Since the 1980s, women\'s political struggles in the domains of reproductive righ
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGIES Gender, Motherhood and Medicine Edited by Michelle Stanworth Polity Press Foetal Images 57 3 Foetal Images: the Power of Visual Culture in the Politics of Reproduction Rosalind Pollack Petchesky Now chimes the glass,
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    CHAPTER 13 Law and ethics of transplanting fetal tissue J. C. POLKINGHORNE IT IS IMPORTANT to recognize that the legal and the ethical are distinct, and only partially overlapping, categories. Lying is always ethically dubious but it becomes illega
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Mobile Identities, Digital Stars, and Post-Cinematic Selves by Mary Flanagan Molly Haskell noted that \"The closer women come to claiming their rights and achieving independence in real life, the more loudly and stridently films tell us its a mans wor
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Posthuman Bodies edited by Judith Halberstarn and Ira Livingston INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Introduction: Posthuman Bodies Judith Halberstam and Ira Livingston Bloomington and Indianapolis If the time should ever come when what is now called science
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Will Surgeons of the \"Computer-game Generation\" Have an Advantage in Developing Robotic Skills? s Angelo LaPietra, MD s Eugene A. Grossi, MD s Christopher C. Derivaux, MD s Costas D. Hanjis, BS s Br yan M. Steinberg, MD s Aubrey C. Galloway, MD s Ste
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Starzl, ET AL. Hepatology, Vol 2. No. 5, 1982 614 Evolution of Liver Transplantation THOMAS E. STARZL, SHUNZABURO IWATSUKI, DAVID H. VAN THIEL, J. CARLTON GARTNER, BASIL J. ZITELLI, J. JEFFREY MALATACK, ROBERT R. SCHADE, BYERS W. SHAW, JR., THOMAS
     
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    The mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience Delivered at the 16th International Congress of Psychoanalysis, Zurich, July 17, 1949 The conception of the mirror stage that I introduced at our last Co
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    Cyborgs and Space L1.2 Altering man\'s bodily functions to meet the requirements of extraterrestrial environments would be more logical than providing an earthly environment for him in space . Artifact-organism systems which would extend man\'s unconscious,
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    DINOTOPIA: THE NEWT WORLD ORDER LIKE BEAST FABLES of any kind, dinosaur stories are really about human beings. Either the dinosaurs must be treated as if they were human, or they must be brought into some kind of encounter with human beings as an alien, h
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    EIGHTEEN Postmodern Procreation: A Cultural Account of Assisted Reproduction Sarah Franklin What is in crisis here is the symbolic order, the conceptualisation of the relationship between nature and culture such that one can talk about the one through the
     
  • SUNY Buffalo DMS 434
    3 Subversive Bodily Acts i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva Kristeva\'s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a specifically feminine locus of subversion of th
     
 
 
 
 
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