Front cover image for Dolly mixtures : the remaking of genealogy

Dolly mixtures : the remaking of genealogy

While the creation of Dolly the sheep, the world's most famous clone, triggered an enormous amount of discussion about human cloning, in Dolly Mixtures the anthropologist Sarah Franklin looks beyond that much-rehearsed controversy to some of the other reasons why the iconic animal's birth and death were significant. Building on the work of historians and anthropologists, Franklin reveals Dolly as the embodiment of agricultural, scientific, social, and commercial histories which are, in turn, bound up with national and imperial aspirations. Dolly was the offspring of a long tradition of animal domestication, as well as the more recent histories of capital accumulation through selective breeding, and enhanced national competitiveness through the control of biocapital. Franklin traces Dolly's connections to Britain's centuries-old sheep and wool markets (which were vital to the nation's industrial revolution) and to Britain's export of animals to its colonies - particularly Australia - to expand markets and produce wealth. Moving forward in time, she explains the celebrity sheep's links to the embryonic cell lines and global bioscientific innovation of the late twentieth century and early twenty-first
Print Book, English, 2007
Duke University Press, Durham, 2007
Electronic books
x, 253 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
9780822339038, 9780822339205, 082233903X, 082233920X
71873672
Sex
Capital
Nation
Colony
Death
"A John Hope Franklin Center book."
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