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University of California Press

About the Book

A 300-million-year tour of the prominent role of the neck in animal evolution and human culture.
 
Humans give a lot of attention to the neck. We decorate it with jewelry and ties, kiss it passionately, and use it to express ourselves in word and song. Yet, at the neck, people have also shackled their prisoners, executed their opponents, and slain their victims. Beyond the drama of human culture, animals have evolved their necks into a staggering variety of shapes and uses vital to their lifestyles. The Neck delves into evolutionary time to solve a living paradox—why is our neck so central to our survival and culture, but so vulnerable to injury and disease?
 
Biologist Kent Dunlap shows how the neck's vulnerability is not simply an unfortunate quirk of evolution. Its weaknesses are intimately connected to the vessels, pipes, and glands that make it so vital to existence. Fun and far-reaching, The Neck explores the diversity of forms and functions of the neck in humans and other animals and shows how this small anatomical transition zone has been a locus of incredible evolutionary and cultural creativity. 

About the Author

Kent Dunlap is Professor of Biology at Trinity College, Hartford, where he teaches physiology and anatomy and conducts research on the neurobiology and behavior of fishes (animals without necks!). In the summers, he also makes pottery and sculpts ceramic animals.

Reviews

"I have never thought of the neck from this point of view before: as a functional entity fulfilling many different and important needs. Kent Dunlap offers a unique and important look at the neck as much more than a mere arbitrary junction between the head and the torso, with their conflicting demands to house the brain, the heart, the lungs, and gut."—Pat Shipman, author of Our Oldest Companions: The Story of the First Dogs
 
"A whole book about necks? Yes! Covering both science and culture, Dunlap reveals how our necks are a site of strength as well as vulnerability and the role they play in communication, status, and sex. Dunlap is the ideal guide to this underappreciated part of our body, and you'll never think of the space between your head and torso in quite the same way after reading this entertaining and engaging book."—Rebecca Heisman, author of Flight Paths: How a Passionate and Quirky Group of Pioneering Scientists Solved the Mystery of Bird Migration