Bio-Imperialism critiques an understudied dimension of the war on terror—US focus on bioterror and germ threats. The book examines the post-9/11 mobilization of bioscience and public health fields to this effort, alongside narratives of Arab/Muslim terror, US vulnerability, white femininity, techno-scientific progress, and pandemic preparedness. The book argues that the US significantly advanced its global control over biological, medical, and health resources during the war on terror.
Bio-Imperialism critiques an understudied dimension of the war on terror—US focus on bioterror and germ threats. The book examines the post-9/11 mobilization of bioscience and public health fields to this effort, alongside narratives of Arab/Muslim terror, US vulnerability, white femininity, techno-scientific progress, and pandemic preparedness. The book argues that the US significantly advanced its global control over biological, medical, and health resources during the war on terror.
Gwen Shuni D'Arcangelis is an associate professor of gender studies at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents List of Illustrations Introduction: Bio-imperialism and the Entanglement of Bioscience, Public Health, and National Security 1. The Making of the Technoscientific Other: Tales of Terrorism, Development, and Third World Morality 2. From Practicing Safe Science to Keeping Science Out of "Dangerous Hands": The Resurgence of U.S. "Biodefense" 3. Co-opting Caregiving: Softening Militarism, Feminizing the Nation 4. Preparedness Migrates: Pandemics, Germ Extraction, and "Global Health Security" Epilogue: Repurposing Science and Public Health Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
Contents List of Illustrations Introduction: Bio-imperialism and the Entanglement of Bioscience, Public Health, and National Security 1. The Making of the Technoscientific Other: Tales of Terrorism, Development, and Third World Morality 2. From Practicing Safe Science to Keeping Science Out of "Dangerous Hands": The Resurgence of U.S. "Biodefense" 3. Co-opting Caregiving: Softening Militarism, Feminizing the Nation 4. Preparedness Migrates: Pandemics, Germ Extraction, and "Global Health Security" Epilogue: Repurposing Science and Public Health Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
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