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<p>From fairground palmistry to the science of fingerprinting, historian Alison Bashford explores the secrets, history and psychology of the hand.</p><p>Alison was in a London library when she discovered a ginormous palm print of a gorilla, taken two days after it died at London Zoo in the 1930s.</p><p>She had no idea whatsoever about why someone had made this mysterious print, or why it had been kept in pristine condition for all these years.</p><p>Alison plunged into researching the history of the hand, from fairground palm reading to Jungian analysis.</p><p>She was transported into the magical, scientific and pseudo-scientific attitudes to markings on the body.</p><p>She encountered Victorian wellness entrepreneurs, how Down Syndrome was first diagnosed in neonates, and celebrity palm readers whose influence reached all the way to former British Prime Minister, William Gladstone.</p><p>Further information</p><p>Alison's book Decoding The Hand: A History of Science, Medicine, and Ma...