95 research outputs found
Human cloning in film: horror, ambivalence, hope
Fictional filmic representations of human cloning have shifted in relation to the 1997 announcement of the birth of Dolly the cloned sheep, and since therapeutic human cloning became a scientific practice in the early twentieth century. The operation and detail of these shifts can be seen through an analysis of the films The Island (2005) and Aeon Flux (2005). These films provide a site for the examination of how these changes in human cloning from fiction to practice, and from horror to hope, have been represented and imagined, and how these distinctions have operated visually in fiction, and in relation to genre
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AIDS articles/media
A newspaper clipping from the New York Times discussing research for AIDS treatment derived from a Chinese plant
But Will It Stop Cancer?
Bernyce Edwards's daughter was 42 in 1997 when she died of breast cancer. It was just 69 days from diagnosis to death. And through her shock and grief, Ms. Edwards had a terrible worry: what if she got breast cancer, too? "That's my biggest fear," she said. So, to protect herself, she has taken up exercise. And not just any exercise. This 73-year-old woman has turned into an exercise zealot
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