Anatomical Dissection in Enlightenment Britain and Beyond: Autopsy, Pathology and Display
Dr Piers Mitchell is one of Britain's leading biological
anthropologists, and is also trained as a medical historian and
anatomist. He teaches at the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology
in the University of Cambridge.
- Hardcover: 175 pages
- Publisher: Ashgate Pub Co (June 2012)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1409418863
- ISBN-13: 978-1409418863
Excavations of medical school and workhouse cemeteries undertaken in
Britain in the last decade have unearthed fascinating new evidence for
the way that bodies were dissected or autopsied in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries. This book brings together the latest discoveries
by these biological anthropologists, alongside experts in the early
history of pathology museums in British medical schools and the various
royal colleges of surgeons, and medical historians studying the social
context of dissection and autopsy in the Georgian and Victorian periods.
Together they reveal a previously unknown view of the practice of
anatomical dissection and the role of museums in this period, in
parallel with the attitudes of the general population to the study of
human anatomy in the Enlightenment.
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