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Modernity in the Flesh
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About the Author

Kristin Ruggiero is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee.

Reviews

"Ruggiero's manuscript is at its very best in its densely rich and colorful account of daily life in fin-de-siecle Buenos Aires. Indeed, the book is a tour de force of narrative detail, ranging widely across the urban landscape and providing a remarkable taxanomy of the various figures composing its diverse population." - Law and Politics Book Review "This fine study is an examination of the role of legal and medical thinking in the construction process of a modern state and the way a heterogeneous group of professionals have dealt with old and new issues, values, and ideas such as honor, passion, and tradition on the one hand, and science, individualism, and modernity on the other." - American HIstorical Review "Modernity in the Flesh is a compelling book that clearly explains the contradictions of modernity in turn-of-the-century Buenos Aires. By looking in detail at criminal cases, Ruggiero is able to provide a persuasive view of the ideas, dilemmas, and struggles of turn-of-the-century Argentines." - Canadian Journal of History/Annales canadiennes d'histoire "This book is a fine study of the interaction between law and medicine in issues central to modernization, nationalism, society, and development. It deserves a wide audience." - Bulletin of the History of Medicine "As an interdisciplinary study, Modernity in the Flesh is a marvel. In order to explicate her court cases, Ruggiero tackles a broad spectrum of European and Argentine social sciences: sociology, criminology, penology, psychology, psychiatry, and law, to mention only the most central. Other historians have had similar ambitions, but she manages, as many others do not, to convey both the complexity and complementarity of the various discourses--on family, honor, gender, class, race, sexuality, contagion, degeneration, and passion--that bound these emerging disciplines together." - Journal of Interdisciplinary History

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