This article examines the 1965 first edition of Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson’s Ett barn blir till (A Child Is Born) by placing the book back in the historical context in which it was produced, marketed, and reviewed. In par- ticular it shows how medicine and the media in Sweden were intertwined in the process of incorporating Nilsson’s photographs of aborted embryos and fetuses into a best-selling book on the origin and development of human life. Nilsson’s work is related to other books in the same genre as well as the popular picture magazines of the time, in order to highlight how it aspired to offer something new. It is argued that a number of commercial and other interests were involved and that an immense effort went into not o...
Today, some of Uppsala University’s museums contain old specimens of embryos, fetuses, newborns, and...
© Copyright is held by the authors. Working papers of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Resea...
In 1946, That Baby: the story of Peter and his new brother, a pioneering children’s photo story book...
This article examines the circulations and transformations of photographer Lennart Nilsson’s pregnan...
This article examines the circulations and transformations of photographer Lennart Nilsson's pregnan...
This article explores some conditions and effects of the publishing of Lennart Nilsson’s photographs...
This article explores the relationship between Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson’s scanning elect...
This study examines the production and the introduction of a fertility treatment which gained great ...
Title: An Overview of Picturebook Research in Sweden. Establishment and Expansion Abstract: Picture...
When you think of children’s picture books, the first images that come to mind will most likely be d...
This article considers the photographic portraits of children reprinted in the Crisis’s “Children’s ...
This chapter explores the circulation, use and public discussion of images of human foetuses travell...
When you think of children’s picture books, the first images that come to mind willmost likely be dr...
During the last hundred years, the Nordic countries have achieved an international reputation for at...
The aim of this study, ”Botanical pictures for the public: On the publication of Carl Lindman’s Bild...
Today, some of Uppsala University’s museums contain old specimens of embryos, fetuses, newborns, and...
© Copyright is held by the authors. Working papers of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Resea...
In 1946, That Baby: the story of Peter and his new brother, a pioneering children’s photo story book...
This article examines the circulations and transformations of photographer Lennart Nilsson’s pregnan...
This article examines the circulations and transformations of photographer Lennart Nilsson's pregnan...
This article explores some conditions and effects of the publishing of Lennart Nilsson’s photographs...
This article explores the relationship between Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson’s scanning elect...
This study examines the production and the introduction of a fertility treatment which gained great ...
Title: An Overview of Picturebook Research in Sweden. Establishment and Expansion Abstract: Picture...
When you think of children’s picture books, the first images that come to mind will most likely be d...
This article considers the photographic portraits of children reprinted in the Crisis’s “Children’s ...
This chapter explores the circulation, use and public discussion of images of human foetuses travell...
When you think of children’s picture books, the first images that come to mind willmost likely be dr...
During the last hundred years, the Nordic countries have achieved an international reputation for at...
The aim of this study, ”Botanical pictures for the public: On the publication of Carl Lindman’s Bild...
Today, some of Uppsala University’s museums contain old specimens of embryos, fetuses, newborns, and...
© Copyright is held by the authors. Working papers of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Resea...
In 1946, That Baby: the story of Peter and his new brother, a pioneering children’s photo story book...