This book considers the cultural history and politics of de-extinction,
an approach to wildlife conservation that seeks to use advanced
biotechnologies for genetic rescue, crisis interventions, and even
species resurrections. It demonstrates how the genomic revolution
creates new possibilities for human transformation of nature and
accelerates the arrival of the era of life-on demand. Fletcher combines
a summative overview of the modern progress in biology and biotechnology
that has brought us to this moment and evaluates the relationship
between de-extinction and provocative contemporary ideas such as
rewilding, eco-modernism, and the Anthropocene. Overall, the book
contends that de-extinction, as reported in the public sphere, shifts
between the demands of science and spectacle and draws upon our ongoing
fascination with lost worlds, Frankenstein's monster, woolly mammoths,
and dinosaurs.