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Anatomy Artists: William Smellie, William Hunter, and the work of Jan van Rymsdyk

As noted by Ludmilla Jordanova and Deanna Petherbridge in The Quick and the Dead: Artists and Anatomy, artists like Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci made enormous contributions to the emerging sciences of the body. The study of anatomy was, in fact, obligatory for many schools of art--and artists like Allessandro Allori composed anatomy textbooks for physicians.The close approximation of art and anatomy meant that the artists needed both “perceptual drawing skills” and “a strong stomach,” but just as the artist might be sometimes an anatomist, the anatomist or physician might sometimes be an artist. In this post, we will...

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(Don't) Call the Midwife? A look at Royal Birth

In recently months, the media has been alight with news about the #RoyalBaby--the expected first child of Princess Kate (formerly Middleton) and Prince William. Hashtags like the one above are, of course, a little misleading; in many ways, the news that has been circulated, discussed, and endlessly retweeted has been less about the baby than his means of arriving here. Questions concerned Kate herself: How was the pregnancy going? Was there any morning sickness? Did the princess feel strange cravings? There were also more general (though often political) questions about succession if the new baby was a girl instead...

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Haunting Images: Photography and Dissection, An Online Exhibit

Welcome back to the Dittrick Musuem Blog! Last week, we featured an online exhibit about dermatology and photography, featuring the work of William Thomas Corlett. This week, I will be presenting material that I have always found personally fascinating--a history of anatomy in pictures! This online exhibit features photographs from our collection of approximately three hundred dissection images (yes!). Most of these intriguing photographs feature a group of students gathered around the cadaver, either actively dissecting or just posing, often wearing their best suits. The students, not the cadavers. Well, not usually. Anatomical dissection and medical education. Beginning in fourteenth century Italy and lasting...

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Medical Paris, 1852

I’ve enjoyed reading David McCullough’s The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris (2011), somewhat to my own surprise.  Not that he’s a bad author in any way, but I have sometimes been disappointed by the “history-lite” tone of some of his writing (1776 is the most flagrant example that comes to mind). But The Greater Journey does not disappoint in this manner.  It delves into the experience of Americans drawn to Paris in the 19th century, including a legion of American medical students and doctors flocking to Paris between 1815 and 1860.  Having read John Harley Warner’s masterful Against the Spirit of System: The French Impulse in Nineteenth-Century...

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