The concept of a universal, standardizable body that can best be  technologically manipulated in isolation from its context has  become a foundation of biomedicine.  
An Anthropology  of Biomedicine introduces biomedicine from an anthropological  perspective, exploring the entanglement of material bodies with  history, environment, culture, and politics. Focusing on the ways  in which the application of biomedical technologies bring about  radical changes to societies at large, medical anthropologist  Margaret Lock and physician and medical anthropologist Vinh-Kim  Nguyen develop and integrate the theory that the human body in  health and illness is not an ontological given but a moveable,  malleable entity – the elusive product of nature and culture  that refuses to be pinned down.   
Tracking the historic global application of biomedical  technologies -- including the management of epidemics as part of  colonial medicine, the control of populations, organ transplants,  assisted reproductions, genetic testing and screening, and other  technologies -- the authors reveal the intended and unintended  local consequences and the exacerbation of global inequalities and  health disparities that such technologies bring about. The argument  is put forward that in addition to focusing on the massive impact  of poverty and social inequality on health and illness, attention  must be given to local biologies, culture, and politics; as well as  to the culture of biomedicine and the unexamined assumptions  embedded in it. An Anthropology of Biomedicine serves  as an important new introduction to the global implications of the  implementation of biomedicine.