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For many of us, one of the most intellectually exciting areas of biomedical research during the past quarter-century has been reproductive physiology, which has revealed the basic mechanisms of reproduction in all their chemical complexity and with all their exquisite temporal coordination. Given the nature of scientific research, much of this work has been narrowly focused and specialized, leading to a somewhat atomized and decontextualized picture of the reproductive process as a whole. In this stimulating book, Harvard anthropologist Peter Ellison boldly attempts to correct that picture. Reproduction, he argues, must be seen as an integrated system operating in specific
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