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Life

A lively history shows that the human neck is full of surprises

The neck is less than 1 per cent of the human body's surface area, but it plays an oversized role in our lives, reveals Kent Dunlap's engaging natural and cultural history

By Elle Hunt

29 January 2025

FRANCE. Fashion shoot for Citizen K International. From 'Fashion Magazine'. 1999.

We adorn the neck with jewels and perfumes, and it plays a key role in human courtship rituals

Martin Parr/Magnum Photos


Kent Dunlap (University of California Press)

The late writer and filmmaker Nora Ephron famously felt bad about her neck. Ephron’s concern, as expressed in her best-known essay , was ageing, and the neck in particular as a “dead give-away” of the passage of time. The visibility of the area and “the truth” it exposed was cause, for Ephron, to cover up with turtlenecks and scarves.

For Kent Dunlap, a biologist at Trinity…

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