| Title | : | Women Without a Shadow: Maternal Desire and Assisted Reproductive Technologies |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.81 (893 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 1853437085 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 247 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2004-05-01 |
| Genre | : |
This detailed and rigorous analysis locates reproductive technologies in the historical context of the progressive technification of the management of human life, and their relation to the social and medical discourses on femininity, maternity and infertility. The circulation of representations between the individual imaginary and collective myths is the basis of a multidisciplinary complex and original point of view, which confronts a variety of discourses arising from psychoanalysis, medicine, journalism, ethnology, mythology and literature.
Editorial :
He tries to hide the apple. "The YogÃÂcÃÂrabhÃ
«mi Meditation Doctrine of the `Nine Stages of Mental Abiding' in East and Central Asian Buddhism." pg 1166.
CHEN, Bing. A nice thing about the book is that it makes no attempt to be deeply encyclopedic. I too am biased (I'm a historian of Italian Renaissance art), and while the as yet unknown master who illustrated the Rohan Hours meets none of the usual criteria for "beauty" in 15th-century painting (say, the style of Fra Angelico's angels or Botticelli's maidens--both of these painters produced fine book illustrations), there is no question that he was a brilliantly inventive, keenly expressive artist. Dee Marie is successful in combining both early British history and mythical characters, masterfully weaved and brought to life.
Merlin is no ordinary child, and throughout the tale he uncovers his life's purpose, while coming to terms with his special powers. She spent time in the beginning developi
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