Partial Life: Difference between revisions
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<br> Mark J. Powers ''et al''.<br> [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~mctbl/BiotechBioeng2002_LiverChip.pdf A Microfabricated Array Bioreactor for Perfused 3D Liver Culture]    | <br> Mark J. Powers ''et al''.<br> [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~mctbl/BiotechBioeng2002_LiverChip.pdf A Microfabricated Array Bioreactor for Perfused 3D Liver Culture]    | ||
<br> Jianzhong Xi, Jacob J. Schmidt and Carlo D. Montemagno<br> [http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v4/n2/full/nmat1308.html Self-Assembled Microdevices Driven by Muscle] <br><br> Thomas Boland ''et al''.<br> [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.a.10059/pdf Cell and Organ Printing 2: Fusion of Cell Aggregates in Three-Dimensional Gels] <br><br> I. Datar and M. Betti<br> [http://www.new-harvest.org/img/files/datar_and_betti.pdf Possibilities for an In Vitro Meat Production System]  | <br> Jianzhong Xi, Jacob J. Schmidt and Carlo D. Montemagno<br> [http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v4/n2/full/nmat1308.html Self-Assembled Microdevices Driven by Muscle] <br><br> Thomas Boland ''et al''.<br> [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.a.10059/pdf Cell and Organ Printing 2: Fusion of Cell Aggregates in Three-Dimensional Gels] <br><br> I. Datar and M. Betti<br> [http://www.new-harvest.org/img/files/datar_and_betti.pdf Possibilities for an In Vitro Meat Production System]    | ||
<br> P. D. Edelman ''et al''.<br> [http://www.new-harvest.org/img/files/Invitro.pdf In Vitro Cultured Meat Production] <br><br>    | <br> P. D. Edelman ''et al''.<br> [http://www.new-harvest.org/img/files/Invitro.pdf In Vitro Cultured Meat Production] <br><br>    | ||
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== Cell Fusion, Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells  ==  | == Cell Fusion, Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells  ==  | ||
<br> Jeremy P. Brockes and Anoop Kumar [http://www.sciencemag.org/content/310/5756/1919.full Appendage Regeneration in Adult Vertebrates and Implications for Regenerative Medicine] <br><br> [http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/cell+fusion Cell Fusion] <br><br> Farhan Chowdhury ''et al''.<br> [http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0015655 Soft Substrates Promote Homogeneous Self Renewal of Embryonic Stem Cells via Downregulating Cell-Matrix Tractions] <br><br> Hannah Landecker<br> [http://www.culturemachine.net/index.php/cm/article/viewArticle/26/33%3E Living Differently in Time: Plasticity, Temporality, and Cellular Biotechnologies] <br><br>    | <br> Jeremy P. Brockes and Anoop Kumar    | ||
[http://www.sciencemag.org/content/310/5756/1919.full Appendage Regeneration in Adult Vertebrates and Implications for Regenerative Medicine] <br><br> [http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/cell+fusion Cell Fusion] <br><br> Farhan Chowdhury ''et al''.<br> [http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0015655 Soft Substrates Promote Homogeneous Self Renewal of Embryonic Stem Cells via Downregulating Cell-Matrix Tractions] <br><br> Hannah Landecker<br> [http://www.culturemachine.net/index.php/cm/article/viewArticle/26/33%3E Living Differently in Time: Plasticity, Temporality, and Cellular Biotechnologies] <br><br>    | |||
== Semi-Living Art  ==  | == Semi-Living Art  ==  | ||
Revision as of 18:58, 4 September 2011

Partial Life and the Semi-Living
edited by Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr 
 Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr 
Introduction
 This Living Book is partially living – it is about the semi-living and partial lives, about tissues without a body. While the biological body cannot survive without organs and cells, the latter two groups can survive in a technological body, which has been removed and separated from their original biological body. They are living fragments of biological bodies, forms of lab-grown life which have been reconfigured, mixed and remixed, reappropriated, recontextualised and instrumentalised. The semi-living thus require a different epistemological and ontological understanding as well as a different consideration and, by extension, a different taxonomy of life. The liminality of this kind of technological approach to life can lead to a form of fetishism -- Neolifism. The semi-living and partial lives are a new class of objects or beings. In most cases they consist of living and non-living materials; of cells and/or tissues from a complex organism which have been grown over, or into, constructed scaffolds and subsequently kept alive with an artificial support. They are both similar and different from other human artefacts (Homo sapiens’ extended phenotype), such as constructed objects and selectively bred domestic plants and animals (both pets and husbandry). These entities are living biological systems which are artificially designed and which, in their isolation, construction, growth and maintenance, need technological intervention. 
 ‘The semi-living’ and ‘partial life’ can be seen as interchangeable terms. There are, however, some nuances between the two. Semi-living entities are usually shaped as forms that are not recognisable as being part of any particular body; partial life can be recognised as parts (such as an ear or tissue) of the whole of a living being. Symbolically, on the continuum of man-made life, semi-living entities are nearer to the constructed side of the scale, while objects of partial life find themselves closer to the grown side of the scale. The ‘population’ of what can be referred to as partial life and semi-living entities has proliferated to reach a vast amount of cells and tissues that are currently living and growing outside of the organisms from which they originated. A rough estimate would put the biomass of the living cells and tissues which are disassociated from the original bodies that once hosted them at millions of tons. In addition, there exist tons of fragments of bodies (cells, tissues, organs) that are maintained in suspended animation in cryogenic conditions. All of this biomass requires an intensive technological intervention to prevent transformation to a non-living state. These beings are rarely referred to as subjects; their existence, supported as it is by the techno-scientific project, is indicative of the transformation of life into a raw material that manifests itself in utilitarian and economic value. (more...) 
 
 
The Historical Perspective on the Semi-Living
 
Precursors of the Semi-Living
 Standard of the World Cyphers Incubator Company, Buffalo N.Y., U.S.A. Annual catalogue, published 1896. 
 Poultry Growers' Guide for 1912, published by Buffalo, Cyphers Incubator Co. 
 Dr Lawrence M. Gartner and Dr Carol B. Gartner
 The Care of Premature Infants: Historical Perspective 
 
The History of Tissue Culture
 Alexis Carrel
 On the Permanent Life of Tissues Outside of the Organism 
 Alexis Carrel and Montrose T. Burrows
 Cultivation of Tissues In Vitro and Its Technique 
 Alexis Carrel and Montrose T. Burrows
 An Addition to the Technique of the Cultivation of Tissues In Vitro 
 Alexis Carrel
 Contributions to the Study of the Mechanism of the Growth of Connective Tissue 
 J. A. Witkowski
 Alexis Carrel and the Mysticism of Tissue Culture Alexis Carrel
 Men, the Unknown 
 
Early Tissue Culture in the UK
 Duncan Wilson
 Early Tissue Culture in Britain: The Interwar Years 
The Tissue Culture King
 Julian Huxley
 The Tissue Culture King 
 
The Plasticity of Cell Lines
 About the ATCC-LGC Standards Partnership, which facilitates the distribution of ATCC cultures and bioproducts to life science researchers throughout Europe and India 
 Stephen J. O'Brien
 Cell Culture Forensics 
 Brendan P. Lucey, Walter A. Nelson-Rees and Grover M. Hutchins
 Henrietta Lacks, HeLa Cells, and Cell Culture Contamination 
 
Tissue Engineering
 R. Langer and J. P. Vacanti
 Tissue Engineering 
 
The Technoscientific Body
 Mark J. Powers et al.
 A Microfabricated Array Bioreactor for Perfused 3D Liver Culture 
 Jianzhong Xi, Jacob J. Schmidt and Carlo D. Montemagno
 Self-Assembled Microdevices Driven by Muscle 
 Thomas Boland et al.
 Cell and Organ Printing 2: Fusion of Cell Aggregates in Three-Dimensional Gels 
 I. Datar and M. Betti
 Possibilities for an In Vitro Meat Production System 
 P. D. Edelman et al.
 In Vitro Cultured Meat Production 
 
Cell Fusion, Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells
 Jeremy P. Brockes and Anoop Kumar 
Appendage Regeneration in Adult Vertebrates and Implications for Regenerative Medicine 
 Cell Fusion 
 Farhan Chowdhury et al.
 Soft Substrates Promote Homogeneous Self Renewal of Embryonic Stem Cells via Downregulating Cell-Matrix Tractions 
 Hannah Landecker
 Living Differently in Time: Plasticity, Temporality, and Cellular Biotechnologies 
 
Semi-Living Art
 Deborah P Dixon
 Creating the Semi-Living: On Politics, Aesthetics and the More-Than-Human 
 Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr
 Towards a New Class of Being –The Extended Body 
 Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr
 Big Pigs, Small Wings: On Genohype and Artistic Autonomy 
 Oron Catts, ed.
 The Aesthetics of Care 
 
Neolife
 The Tissue Culture and Art Project 
 The Frozen Ark Project