This paper examines the role of the images pregnant female body within the historical developments of surgery and anatomy in the late eighteenth century through an analysis of three British obstetrical atlases by William Smellie (1754), Charles Nicholas Jenty (1757) and William Hunter (1774). These obstetrical atlases were hailed as ‘scientific’ representations of reproductive female anatomy during a period when surgery and anatomy was deemed a lowly manual craft, unworthy of scientific status. The paper shows how the surgeons’ claims to their scientific objectivity, based upon an anatomical view of the body, were made through reference to artistic discourses, the verisimilitude of image techniques, as well as the developing discourse of su...
Originally published in De dissectione partium corporis humani libri tres ... Parisiis, Apud S. Coli...
This historical research traces evolving beliefs about the function of the pelvis in childbirth from...
Eschewing the symbolic in favour of commitment to the unmediated replication of exactly that which i...
In the eighteenth century, the unanimous and uncontested authority of female midwives over the birth...
The anatomical body figures as a privileged site in the signification of sexual difference. This pap...
The first full study of “birth figures” and their place in early modern knowledge-making. Birth figu...
This article addresses the trend, in early modern anatomical and midwifery books, of depicting the f...
My thesis is a historical and cultural study of how the womb was visualized in Britain circa 1660-17...
This thesis provides a history of early modern birth figures: images of the fetus in the disembodied...
The eighteenth century in Europe was a time of intellectual and cultural advancement, with new syste...
This article deals with the production of specialized knowledge about the female body between the 1...
Originally published in Heel-konstige aanmerkkingen betreffende de gebreeken der vrouwen. Amsterdam,...
Originally published in Heel-konstige aanmerkkingen betreffende de gebreeken der vrouwen. Amsterdam,...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Originally published in De dissectione partium corporis humani libri tres ... Parisiis, Apud S. Coli...
This historical research traces evolving beliefs about the function of the pelvis in childbirth from...
Eschewing the symbolic in favour of commitment to the unmediated replication of exactly that which i...
In the eighteenth century, the unanimous and uncontested authority of female midwives over the birth...
The anatomical body figures as a privileged site in the signification of sexual difference. This pap...
The first full study of “birth figures” and their place in early modern knowledge-making. Birth figu...
This article addresses the trend, in early modern anatomical and midwifery books, of depicting the f...
My thesis is a historical and cultural study of how the womb was visualized in Britain circa 1660-17...
This thesis provides a history of early modern birth figures: images of the fetus in the disembodied...
The eighteenth century in Europe was a time of intellectual and cultural advancement, with new syste...
This article deals with the production of specialized knowledge about the female body between the 1...
Originally published in Heel-konstige aanmerkkingen betreffende de gebreeken der vrouwen. Amsterdam,...
Originally published in Heel-konstige aanmerkkingen betreffende de gebreeken der vrouwen. Amsterdam,...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Originally published in De dissectione partium corporis humani libri tres ... Parisiis, Apud S. Coli...
This historical research traces evolving beliefs about the function of the pelvis in childbirth from...
Eschewing the symbolic in favour of commitment to the unmediated replication of exactly that which i...