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Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities
 
 

Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities [Paperback]

Jan Bondeson
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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The history of medicine is a tale of human attempts to understand, explain, and predict the workings of nature. Sometimes those attempts can take strange turns, as Jan Bondeson shows in this diverting collection of medical oddments. A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities takes in matters such as stomach-dwelling snakes, not-unjustified fears of being buried alive, gigantism, lice-borne diseases, spontaneous combustion, and assorted monstrosities. Bondeson, a London-based medical researcher, combs out-of-the-way archives to populate his essays with strange case studies, among them the story of the California Indian Julia Pastrana, "a normal, intelligent woman of gentle disposition" who, owing to her unfortunate werewolf-like appearance, spent much of her life as a circus freak. Bondeson retells Pastrana's tragic tale, and many others, with sympathy and imagination. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

The title of this work is also a metaphor for Bondeson's study, invoking a trip to an old-fashioned museum where visitors gaze in amazement at displays of "the odd, the bizarre, and the unexpected." Bondeson "exhibits" such specimens as the Ape Woman, the Two-Headed Boy of Bengal, giants, and people with tails. Other gruesome medical mysteries appear as well, including premature burial, spontaneous human combustion, and stomach-infesting snakes. Bondeson, a physician and medical researcher, regards his exhibits with a careful scientist's eye, discovering misinterpreted evidence, tragic genetic mutations, and, occasionally, outright fraud. Bondeson's book, unfortunately, shares one of the same drawbacks that doomed the museums he celebrates: Although individual exhibits are interesting and entertaining, chapters read like discrete journal articles, and the thoughtful visitor may yearn for more coherence and context that an introduction or conclusion could have provided. Nevertheless, this is a useful addition to medical history collections.?Kathleen Arsenault, Univ. of South Florida-St. Petersburg Lib.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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IN 1635 THE BOARD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF Copenhagen was called in to give judgment on a difficult forensic question. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Medical Curiosities Brilliantly Displayed, April 13 2002
By 
This review is from: Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities (Paperback)
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (and even more recently), medical and natural history museums combined elements of science and folklore with an infatuation for the bizarre and grotesque. Thus, they were often likened to the old-time "cabinet of curiosities", displays of disparate and unusual artifacts which bore no relationship to one another. A visitor to these museums often saw things which, in later years, became the staple of carnival side shows.

In "A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities", Jan Bondeson, a British physician who also holds a doctorate in experimental medicine, has written a fascinating and brilliantly executed textual analogue to the cabinet of curiousities. In successive chapters, Bondeson details, among other curiousities, the histories of spontaneous human combustion, apparent death and premature burial, maternal impressions (the belief that what a pregnant woman sees and experiences can cause corresponding alterations in the unborn fetus), and people with tails. Bondeson tells true, and not so true, stories of dwarfs and giants. He relates the story of Mary Toft, the English woman who, in 1726, was believed to have given birth to seventeen rabbits. And, of course, such a compendium of marvels would not be complete without a bearded lady--in this case, Bondeson narrates the remarkable life story of Julie Pastrana, who made appearances throughout the world in the mid-nineteenth century and whose mummified body (along with the mummified corpse of her infant child) continued to draw crowds at fairs and carnivals many years after her death.

While these topics may seem grotesque, even repulsive, Bondeson writes with deep feeling for his human subjects and a wry sense of humor for the foibles of his sometimes credulous profession. He also integrates these seemingly freakish and disparate topics into remarkably lucid and informative discussions of their place in the medical, scientific, religious, and literary discourse of their times.

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3.0 out of 5 stars A Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities, Jun 15 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities (Paperback)
"A Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities" is an interesting book. I expected better photos, not hand drawings.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Medical Curiosities Brilliantly Displayed, July 9 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities (Paperback)
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (and even more recently), medical and natural history museums combined elements of science and folklore with an infatuation for the bizarre and grotesque. Thus, they were often likened to the old-time "cabinet of curiosities", displays of disparate and unusual artifacts which bore no relationship to one another. A visitor to these museums often saw things which, in later years, became the staple of carnival side shows.

In "A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities", Jan Bondeson, a British physician who also holds a doctorate in experimental medicine, has written a fascinating and brilliantly executed textual analogue to the cabinet of curiousities. In successive chapters, Bondeson details, among other curiousities, the histories of spontaneous human combustion, apparent death and premature burial, maternal impressions (the belief that what a pregnant woman sees and experiences can cause corresponding alterations in the unborn fetus), and people with tails. Bondeson tells true, and not so true, stories of dwarfs and giants. He relates the story of Mary Toft, the English woman who, in 1726, was believed to have given birth to seventeen rabbits. And, of course, such a compendium of marvels would not be complete without a bearded lady--in this case, Bondeson narrates the remarkable life story of Julie Pastrana, who made appearances throughout the world in the mid-nineteenth century and whose mummified body (along with the mummified corpse of her infant child) continued to draw crowds at fairs and carnivals many years after her death.

While these topics may seem grotesque, even repulsive, Bondeson writes with deep feeling for his human subjects and a wry sense of humor for the foibles of his sometimes credulous profession. He also integrates these seemingly freakish and disparate topics into remarkably lucid and informative discussions of their place in the medical, scientific, religious, and literary discourse of their times.

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