Life
The neck is lower than 1 per cent of the human physique’s floor space, but it surely performs an outsized position in our lives, reveals Kent Dunlap’s participating pure and cultural historical past
By Elle Hunt

We adorn the neck with jewels and perfumes, and it performs a key position in human courtship rituals
Martin Parr/Magnum Photographs
The Neck
Kent Dunlap (College of California Press)
The late author and filmmaker Nora Ephron famously felt dangerous about her neck. Ephron’s concern, as expressed in her best-known essay I Really feel Dangerous About My Neck, was ageing, and the neck particularly as a “lifeless give-away” of the passage of time. The visibility of the world and “the reality” it uncovered was trigger, for Ephron, to cowl up with turtlenecks and scarves.
For Kent Dunlap, a biologist at Trinity…
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