Life Atomic - Angela Creager

Life Atomic

Angela Creager

出版时间

2013-10-18

ISBN

9780226017808

评分

★★★★★
书籍介绍

After World War II, the US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) began mass-producing radioisotopes, sending out nearly 64,000 shipments of radioactive materials to scientists and physicians by 1955. Even as the atomic bomb became the focus of Cold War anxiety, radioisotopes represented the government's efforts to harness the power of the atom for peace-advancing medicine, domestic energy, and foreign relations. In Life Atomic, Angela N. H. Creager tells the story of how these radioisotopes, which were simultaneously scientific tools and political icons, transformed biomedicine and ecology. Government-produced radioisotopes provided physicians with new tools for diagnosis and therapy, specifically cancer therapy, and enabled biologists to trace molecular transformations. Yet the government's attempt to present radioisotopes as marvelous dividends of the atomic age was undercut in the 1950s by the fallout debates, as scientists and citizens recognized the hazards of low-level radiation. Creager reveals that growing consciousness of the danger of radioactivity did not reduce the demand for radioisotopes at hospitals and laboratories, but it did change their popular representation from a therapeutic agent to an environmental poison. She then demonstrates how, by the late twentieth century, public fear of radioactivity overshadowed any appreciation of the positive consequences of the AEC's provision of radioisotopes for research and medicine.

Angela N. H. Creager is the Philip and Beulah Rollins Professor of History at Princeton University. She is the author of The Life of a Virus and coeditor of Feminism in Twentieth-Century Science, Technology, and Medicine, both published by the University of Chicago Press.

用户评论
讲的是放射性同位素的学术史和社会史吧。radioisotope作为分子生物学研究中的tracer,作为建立战后学术网络的实验材料,作为“治疗”癌症的希望,作为实验室产生的”model pollutant“,以及作为连接实验室、政府、自然基金的关键。每一章的完成度都特别高,完全可以拆开做教材。最后,作者的intro和conclusion写的真是好,prelim小天使
A parallel between radioisotope as the instrument tracing the morphosis and movement of molecules in living organisms and their surroundings, and radioisotope as “historical tracers” of scientific change in how we have come to view medicine, materials and diseases in molecular and biochemical ways.
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