Dear colleagues,
Please join us on Tuesday (25th October) for the second seminar in the 2016–17 History of Pre-Modern Medicine series, with Professor Luke Demaitre (University of Virginia)
Title:
Disfiguring disease in medical and popular perceptions: ‘aspectus’ and ‘spectaculum’
Abstract:
Pre-modern records attest to various disfigurements caused by disease, which ranged from skin blemishes to facial distortion and bodily deformity. Responses to these diseases as
disabling or contagious were secondary to impressions of the disfigured appearance. This fact may seem too obvious to state, but it tends to be overlooked in histories of dramatic disease. Aside from the far-reaching and timeless implications, the primacy
of appearance is of historical interest because it opens perspectives on cultural sensitivities and social contexts. In particular, immediate responses to disfigurement reflect a gradual divergence between the medical gaze and popular perception – notwithstanding
the dynamic interaction between science and everyday life. The scientist and practitioner view appearances aggressively and analytically as signs of underlying bodily conditions or events. They devote relatively little attention to disfigurements and, with
the notable exception of two groups, they report them in unemotional terms. The patient and the lay bystander, on the other hand, react instantly, emotionally and holistically to the sensory stimuli of appearance, especially to danger, ugliness and misery.
The emotions, which range from fear and revulsion to charity, are fostered as well as expressed in words and pictures.
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The seminar will take place in the Wellcome Library, 183 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE.
Doors open at 6pm prompt, the seminar will start at 6.15pm.
For more details see:
http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2016/10/disfiguring-disease-in-medical-and-popular-perceptions/.
With best wishes,
Ross
Ross MacFarlane
Research Engagement Officer
Wellcome Library
T +44 (0)20 7611 7340
F +44 (0)20 7611 8369
@wellcomelibrary
Wellcome Trust
215 Euston Road
London NW1 2BE, UK
Wellcome Library is part of Wellcome
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