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Normality
Book

Normality

A Critical Genealogy

University of Chicago Press, 2017 更多详情


Editorial Rating

6

Qualities

  • Analytical
  • For Experts
  • Hot Topic

Recommendation

Have you wondered where the idea of the normal comes from? Consider these sources: Italians measuring criminals’ skulls, 19th-century French arguments about how medicine works and how much math should be involved, and statues depicting average Americans. They all helped shape what people see as normal. To show how “normal” has changed over time, transformed by rhetoric and contesting disciplines, Peter Cryle and Elizabeth Stephens explore the disciplines that shaped what’s normal and explain its implications. Anyone interested in cultural and social norms and in how people understand themselves will appreciate this book.

Take-Aways

  • The idea of the “normal” is recent and contested; even the word has had various meanings.
  • In the 1830s medicine and statistics intersected to shape the normal.
  • Early scientists tried to use statistics to measure bodies and typify race.

About the Authors

Peter Cryle is an emeritus professor at the University of Queensland’s Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, where Elizabeth Stephens is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow.


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