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Intro
Series Editors' Preface
Praise for From Measuring Rods to DNA Sequencing
Contents
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures
List of Tables
1: Introduction: What Measuring Means
Getting the Measure of Things: A Macro Approach
Measurement as an Indicator of Historical Forms of Human Cognition
Measurements and Powers: Foucault's Heritage
Measurement, from Self-Care to Self-Management
Measurement Considered as a Praxis and a Contextualized Activity
Measurement as Assemblage
A Contextualized Activity
Measuring to Produce Ontologies
Making Others

Making Temporalities and Hierarchizing Rhythms
Structure of the Book
Bibliography
Part I: The Measurements of the Human Body Between the Nineteenth and the Twentieth Century: from the Flesh to the Subjectivity
2: Producing Otherness Through Resemblance: Bodily Orifices and the Measuring of the Human (1800-1860)
Describing or Measuring Differences
Resemblance and Genealogical Thinking
From Beastly Ugliness to Fallacious Seduction
Sensory Organs: Controlling Time and the World
Clinical Clues: Generation Trouble
Numerating the Invisible

Conclusion: The Dangers of Analogy in Scientific Reasoning
References
Sources
Bibliography
3: Talking Bones: Age in Nineteenth-Century Forensic Handbooks (1813-1906)
The Anatomic Politics of "Bone Age"
Forensic Medicine Treatises: A Vantage Point to Examine Two Early and Late Nineteenth-Century Ontogenetic Models
Age as a Marker of Singularity at the Beginnings of Forensic Medicine in the Early Nineteenth Century
The "Médecin Total" and the Art of the Forensic Pathologist According to Fodéré
The Body: A Tangle of Passions, Lifestyles, and Organs

Age: An Equivocal Criterion and the Mark of a Unique Biographical Experience
Measuring Singularity
Age as a Development Marker Used in Association with Chronological Thresholds in Late Nineteenth-Century Medical Expertise
Orfila or the Experimental Biochemical Shift in Forensic Science
Lacassagne and the Hygienist Movement: Age as an Organic State, an Individual Modifier, and a Lever for the Fortification of the Population
The Progress of Ossification and the Measuring of Age in Lacassagne's Forensic Medicine
Conclusion
Sources
Medicine and Forensic Medicine

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