Recently, we were faced with a request from a student photographer who wanted to take pictures of bodies donated to our institute and used for dissection courses for medical students or for scientific purposes. Students are expressly forbidden to take pictures in the dissection hall; however, we allowed this student photographer to do her diploma work in our institute. The reason why she was proposing such a topic was that her brother died young and her parents donated his body to science. To overcome this loss of a loved one, she wanted to know what happens to the donated bodies. She followed the procedure of embalming and different dissections that took place during the summer semester and she took pictures throughout. The outcome of this...
The leading idea of my Master project is based on my private experiences which have become an inspir...
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 the posthumous paintings previously made for the kin...
Modern medicine in Western Society has in part alienated people to the process of dying. We obvious...
Chapter positions contemporary art’s ability to affect understandings of issues around death: how ar...
Lessons from the Dead 2 Dissection of a human cadaver is a time-honored tradition for teaching anato...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
What is death in contemporary world? “Faked”, multiplied by movies and games, it becomes standard, i...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
In its present form and throughout Western civilization, capturing the image of the cadaver, whether...
Photography And Death – Entaglement And Real ContactThe canonic texts devoted to photography,...
The development of academic research and professional practice regarding human aspects of death, dyi...
Post-mortem photography was a transcendental element in the 19th century, which not only democratize...
In this video, Deborah Posel, a sociologist, explores the journey taken by medical professionals as ...
The purpose of this practice-based research has been to gain knowledge of the history of Western ana...
The leading idea of my Master project is based on my private experiences which have become an inspir...
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 the posthumous paintings previously made for the kin...
Modern medicine in Western Society has in part alienated people to the process of dying. We obvious...
Chapter positions contemporary art’s ability to affect understandings of issues around death: how ar...
Lessons from the Dead 2 Dissection of a human cadaver is a time-honored tradition for teaching anato...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
What is death in contemporary world? “Faked”, multiplied by movies and games, it becomes standard, i...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
In its present form and throughout Western civilization, capturing the image of the cadaver, whether...
Photography And Death – Entaglement And Real ContactThe canonic texts devoted to photography,...
The development of academic research and professional practice regarding human aspects of death, dyi...
Post-mortem photography was a transcendental element in the 19th century, which not only democratize...
In this video, Deborah Posel, a sociologist, explores the journey taken by medical professionals as ...
The purpose of this practice-based research has been to gain knowledge of the history of Western ana...
The leading idea of my Master project is based on my private experiences which have become an inspir...
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 the posthumous paintings previously made for the kin...
Modern medicine in Western Society has in part alienated people to the process of dying. We obvious...