Making Mice: Standardizing Animals for American Biomedical Research, 1900-1955
Karen Rader
- Hardcover: 312 pages
- Publisher: Princeton University Press (July 1 2012)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0691016364
- ISBN-13: 978-0691016368
- Product Dimensions: 23.8 x 15.6 x 2.4 cm
Making Mice blends scientific biography, institutional
history, and cultural history to show how genetically standardized mice
came to play a central role in contemporary American biomedical
research.
Karen Rader introduces us to mouse "fanciers" who bred
mice for different characteristics, to scientific entrepreneurs like
geneticist C. C. Little, and to the emerging structures of modern
biomedical research centered around the National Institutes of Health.
Throughout Making Mice, Rader explains how the story of mouse
research illuminates our understanding of key issues in the history of
science such as the role of model organisms in furthering scientific
thought. Ultimately, genetically standardized mice became icons of
standardization in biomedicine by successfully negotiating the tension
between the natural and the man-made in experimental practice.
This book will become a landmark work for its understanding of the
cultural and institutional origins of modern biomedical research. It
will appeal not only to historians of science but also to biologists and
medical researchers.
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