Daniel Asen is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Rutgers University, Newark. His published research has investigated the social and cultural contexts of science and medicine in late imperial and twentieth-century China, with attention to transnational and global perspectives. His work has been published in Social History of Medicine and East Asian Science, Technology and Society, as well as within edited volumes on legal history and the history of medicine in China. He is a member of the American Historical Association, the Association for Asian Studies, and the International Society for Chinese Law and History.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Suspicious deaths and city life in Republican Beijing 2. On the case with the Beijing procuracy 3. Disputed forensics and skeletal remains 4. Publicity, professionals, and the cause of forensic reform 5. Professional politics of a crime scene 6. Dissection and its discontents 7. Legal medicine during the Nanjing decade Conclusion: a history of forensic modernity Glossary Bibliography Index.
Introduction 1. Suspicious deaths and city life in Republican Beijing 2. On the case with the Beijing procuracy 3. Disputed forensics and skeletal remains 4. Publicity, professionals, and the cause of forensic reform 5. Professional politics of a crime scene 6. Dissection and its discontents 7. Legal medicine during the Nanjing decade Conclusion: a history of forensic modernity Glossary Bibliography Index.
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