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This book is a rich mix of just about everything you would want to know about the necessary and complex covering of your body. Nina Jablonski writes not only as an anthropologist but also as an ethologist, comparative biologist, and psychologist. She weaves a vivid, compelling history, which at times is intertwined with social discourse (skin color and racism) and advice (skin and sun protection).
Jablonski argues that the skin of present-day humans is not vastly different from that of the earliest vertebrates in its function: it is protective, sensitive, and capable of interactions with the outside environment. The skin
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