Buy this book
- About this book
-
Offering a cultural history of blood as it was mobilized across twentieth-century U.S. medicine, militarisms, and popular culture, Hannabach examines the ways that blood has saturated the cultural imaginary.
- About the authors
-
Cathy Hannabach is a US independent scholar and editor whose research focuses on transnational feminist cultural studies, queer disability studies, and science and technology studies. Her work has appeared in Women and Performance, Cultural Politics, Social Text, and Studies in Gender and Sexuality. She is the founder of Philly Queer Media, a media arts organization that fosters new, intersectional work in the performing, media, visual, and media arts.
- Table of contents (6 chapters)
-
-
Introduction
Pages 1-10
-
Bleeding Identities: The Racial and Sexual Politics of Blood Drive Activism
Pages 11-36
-
Cartographies of Blood and Violence
Pages 37-64
-
Technologies of Blood: The Biopolitics of Asylum
Pages 65-91
-
Blood and the Bomb: Atomic Cities, Nuclear Kinship, and Queer Vampires
Pages 92-114
-
Table of contents (6 chapters)
Bibliographic Information
- Bibliographic Information
-
- Book Title
- Blood Cultures: Medicine, Media, and Militarisms
- Authors
-
- Cathy Hannabach
- Copyright
- 2015
- Publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan US
- Copyright Holder
- Cathy Hannabach
- eBook ISBN
- 978-1-137-57782-5
- DOI
- 10.1007/978-1-137-57782-5
- Hardcover ISBN
- 978-1-137-58158-7
- Edition Number
- 1
- Number of Pages
- VIII, 153
- Topics