<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><i>Race Decoded</i> explores the world of elite genomic science, investigating how the world's leading scientists grapple with questions of identity and social change in their efforts to understand a new science of race.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><i>Race Decoded</i> explores the world of elite genomic science, investigating how the world's leading scientists grapple with questions of identity and social change in their efforts to understand a new science of race.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Bliss has produced a first-rate analysis of the production and meaning of genomic data that are often being organized according to the naturalistically reified categories of American political life. Anyone perplexed over the mixed messages about race that have been coming out of genomics these past few years will find <i>Race Decoded</i> an important book.--Jonathan Marks "<i>SCIENCE</i>"<br><br>Catherine Bliss offers vital and original insight into the values and--most importantly--the political consciousness of genomic researchers themselves, to discern the potentially politically empowering use of race categorisations to bring minoritised bodies to the growing political platform of genomic enquiry . . . <i>Race Decoded</i> should compel further interrogation of the political positionalities engendered by scientists in the field of biomedical research.--Rosalind G. Williams "<i>Sociology</i>"<br><br>In a well-researched, fascinating, and meticulous study, Catherin Bliss unravels the motivations that genetic scientists bring to their work, and how these motivations caused them to return to considerations of race . . . <i>Race Decoded</i> is an important contribution to the scholarship on science and race as it treats geneticists as complex social actors, and in doing so complicates narratives regarding the roles science and scientists play in producing and reproducing race and inequality.--Susan Markens "<i>Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews</i>"<br><br>In this ambitious undertaking, Bliss expertly navigates [the themes discussed] in her seven chapters . . . I assigned the book as one of two main texts for the upper-division '(Con)Sequential Genealogies of Difference: Anthropology and Genomics' course I taught at U.C. Berkeley in Spring 2013. Bliss' work provided an excellent teaching opportunity to explore the gaffed edges between STS and anthropology, as well as between historiography and enthnography. In that respect, the book served to stimulate lively classroom debate about the epistemic and methodological orientations shaping different disciplinary narratives of the technoscientific field.--James Battle "<i>Somatosphere</i>"<br><br>The ongoing debates about the role of race in biology, genetics, and clinical medicine have often produced more heat than light. Catherine Bliss takes us on a journey that is bound to illuminate an important and relatively unexplored feature of this phenomenon--the ways in which leading scientists in these fields compare in their thinking about (and use of) the concepts of race and ethnicity.--Troy Duster "New York University"<br><br>With the mapping of the human genome, a heated and contentious debate has flared regarding the very concept of race and the extent and meaning of human variation. What is stunning and original about Bliss's account of this debate is her focus on the assumptions, values, and social consciousness of the scientists themselves. We see how researchers navigate different taxonomies of race and establish what often become contested policies, protocols, and practices. Through this account, Bliss provocatively captures the emergence of a new 'sociogenomic' paradigm of race.--Michael Omi, University of California "Berkeley"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Catherine Bliss is Howard Hughes Postdoctoral Fellow in Biomedicine, Medical Humanities, and Science and Technology Studies at Brown University.
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