Happy #PubDay for the Complex/Traditional Chinese translation of HUMANS: A MONSTROUS HISTORY from Gusa Publishing House, Taiwan! Available: World excluding Mainland China. More translations coming! 💙📚 🧪 🗃 #medieval #earlymodern #histsci #histmed #18thC #HAMH #worldhistory #politics 1/
I love the Michelangelo meets Murderbot cover for this edition – it provides a great sense of the range of the book! Here’s the original, equally magnificent cover for original, English-language edition from @[email protected]. Yes, that’s a xenomorph slinking up the side. 2/
HUMANS: A Monstrous History is a history of how the idea of “human” from antiquity to the present has been defined in relation to monsters. It braids together science, society, literature, and pop culture, from Aristotle to Star Trek. 3/ www.surekhadavies.org/humans-a-mon...

Humans: A Monstrous History — ...
Humans: A Monstrous History — Surekha Davies

Surekha Davies
Monsters (by various names) stand at the boundaries between humans and nature, animals, gods, machines, and aliens. Defining monsters was also central to inventing the categories of race, gender, and nation. 4/
If you’d like to try HUMANS: A MONSTROUS HISTORY before you buy, I’ve published some excerpts and spinoff essays (links in bio; go to “essays” on my website). Linked below is a sample excerpt, one of my favourites. Please consider sharing this with your friends! 5/ www.folger.edu/podcasts/sha...

Surekha Davies on the Making o...
Surekha Davies on the Making of Monsters | Folger Shakespeare Library

Folger Shakespeare Library is the world's largest Shakespeare collection, the ultimate resource for exploring Shakespeare and his world. Shakespeare belongs to you. His world is vast. Come explore. Join us online, on the road, or in Washington, DC.

To receive another excerpt, just sign up for my free newsletter, Notes from a Science Historian. Later this month I'll be sending out a special issue (just for subscribers and new signups), about the story behind a recent essay I wrote for Smithsonian Magazine. 6/ buttondown.com/surekhadavie...

Strange and Wondrous: Notes fr...
Strange and Wondrous: Notes from a Science Historian

Welcome to my newsletter! I’m Dr Surekha Davies, historian of science and author of Humans: A Monstrous History (University of California Press, 2025) and the multi-award-winning Renaissance Ethnography and the Invention of the Human: New Worlds, Maps and Monsters (Cambridge University Press, 2016). I’ve also published essays in Smithsonian Magazine, LA Times, the Times Literary Supplement, Science, Nature, Reactor Magazine, and elsewhere. This newsletter is about strange stories in history, culture, science, often about monsters or monster-making. It appears 2-3 times a month and includes updates about my new writing, podcast interviews, and speaking events. Sign up now for free! You’ll automatically receive a subscriber-only essay, “Behind the Smithsonian Magazine essay”, about a piece I wrote for the magazine on a Renaissance painting of hell, and an excerpt from Humans: A Monstrous History. To learn more about me and to read some of my newspaper and magazine essays, please visit my website, www.surekhadavies.org.

Here's my Halloween essay for @[email protected]. Sign up for my free newsletter to get the "story behind the story" special issue (only for free subscribers; not for the web archive) coming out later this month! 7/7 www.smithsonianmag.com/history/this...