Cicatrice


Book Description

In October 2008, Mel (Malavika Lal) is a healthy, happy twenty-two-year-old honours, studying at Melbourne University. Brought from India to Australia when she was just six (after a family tragedy that left her orphaned), Jamie Stevens later becomes the only family she needs. That is, until a stranger approaches and relays a grim tale, along with a dire warning. A week later, Mel drops out of her studies, vacates her apartment, and without a word, disappears. Five years later, Mel is a freelance photographer who no longer acknowledges the woman she once was, or the life she once led. She's on the run from Amir Hashim, a sadistic vengeance-driven madman who blames her family for the death of his own. Her life is necessarily vagabond; the only consistencies fear, isolation and emptiness. Until a chance reunion forces her to decide between continuing to run, or reclaiming her life.




Science


Book Description

Vols. for 1911-13 contain the Proceedings of the Helminothological Society of Washington, ISSN 0018-0120, 1st-15th meeting.











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Crossways of Sex


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Crafting Immunity


Book Description

Immunity is as old as illness itself, yet historians have only just begun to take up the challenge of reconstructing the modern transformation of attempts to protect against disease. Crafting Immunity assembles in one volume the most recent efforts of an international group of scholars to place the diverse practices of immunity in their historical contexts. It is this diversity that provides the book with its greatest source of strength. Collectively, the papers in this volume suggest that it was the craft-like, small-scale, and local conditions of clinical medicine that turned the immunity of individuals and populations into biomedical objects. That is to say, the modern conception of immunity was at least as much the product of the work of healing as it was the systematic result of discoveries about the immune system.Working outside the narrow confines of laboratory histories, Crafting Immunity is the first attempt to set the problems of immunity into a variety of social, technological, institutional and intellectual contexts. It will appeal not only to historians and sociologists of health, but also to social and cultural historians interested in the biomedical creation of modern health regimens.








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