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The Transparent Body: A Cultural Analysis of Medical Imaging / Edition 1
Barnes and Noble
The Transparent Body: A Cultural Analysis of Medical Imaging / Edition 1
Current price: $35.00
Barnes and Noble
The Transparent Body: A Cultural Analysis of Medical Imaging / Edition 1
Current price: $35.00
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From the potent properties of X rays evoked in Thomas Mann's
to the miniaturized surgical team of the classic science fiction film Fantastic Voyage, the possibility of peering into the inner reaches of the body has engaged the twentieth-century popular and scientific imagination. Drawing on examples that are international in scope,
examines the dissemination of medical images to a popular audience, advancing the argument that medical imaging technologies are the material embodiment of collective desires and fantasiesthe most pervasive of which is the ideal of transparency itself.
traces the cultural context and wider social impact of such medical imaging practices as X ray and endoscopy, ultrasound imaging of fetuses, the filming and broadcasting of surgical operations, the creation of plastinated corpses for display as art objects, and the use of digitized cadavers in anatomical study.In the early twenty-first century, the interior of the body has become a pervasive cultural presence - as accessible to the public eye as to the physician's gaze. Jose van Dijck explores the multifaceted interactions between medical images and cultural ideologies that have brought about this situation.
unfolds the complexities involved in medical images and their making, illuminating their uses and meanings both within and outside of medicine. Van Dijck demonstrates the ways in which the ability to render the inner regions of the human body visible - and the proliferation of images of the body's interior in popular media - affect our view of corporeality and our understanding of health and disease. Written in an engaging style that brings thought-provoking cultural intersections vividly to life,
will be of special interest to those in media studies, cultural studies, science and technology studies, medical humanities, and the history of medicine.