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Affected Doctors: Dead Bodies and Affective and Professional Cultures in Early Modern European Anatomy.
Osiris ( IF 0.5 ) Pub Date : 2016-01-01
Rafael Mandressi

From the end of the thirteenth century, when the practice of human anatomical dissections emerged in Europe, the dead body became part of the cultural economy of knowledge. This had epistemic, technical, and social consequences, in which the affective dimension played a crucial role. The type of manipulations the corpse underwent brought into play affective phenomena of unusual intensity. To a great extent, anatomy owed its repertoire of gestures, spaces, and instruments to the need to control these affects, and this repertoire contributed to the discourse that shaped the professional identity of anatomists. Rather than being simply knowledge trapped in a web of preexisting sensibilities, anatomy was, in early modern Europe, a locus where affective cultures were produced and negotiated among several professional and social groups.

中文翻译:

受影响的医生:早期现代欧洲解剖学中的尸体以及情感和专业文化。

从十三世纪末开始,当人体解剖解剖学在欧洲出现时,尸体已成为知识文化经济的一部分。这具有认知,技术和社会后果,其中情感层面起着至关重要的作用。尸体进行的操纵类型发挥了异常强度的情感现象。在很大程度上,解剖学归功于其控制手势,空间和工具的必要性,而这种保留法则有助于塑造解剖学家专业身份的论述。在早期的现代欧洲,解剖学不仅是简单地存在于已存在的敏感性网络中的知识,而且还是几个专业和社会团体之间产生和协商情感文化的场所。
更新日期:2019-11-01
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