From the late eighteenth century to the present day, public exhibitions featuring displays of human anatomy have proven popular with a wide range of audiences, successfully marketed as educational facilities for medical professionals as well as improving entertainments for the general public. Partly a product of the public sanitation and health reform movements that began in the eighteenth century, partly a form of popular spectacle, early public anatomical exhibitions drew on two apparently distinct cultural developments: firstly, the professionalisation of medicine from the mid 1700s and...
From the late eighteenth century to the present day, public exhibitions featuring displays of human anatomy have proven popular with a wide range of a...
An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and through Knowledge Unlatched. Disability and the Posthuman is the first study to analyse cultural representations and deployments of disability as they interact with posthumanist theories of technology and embodiment. Working across a wide range of texts, many new to critical enquiry, in contemporary writing, film and cultural practice from North America, Europe, the Middle East and Japan, it covers a diverse range of topics, including: contemporary cultural theory and aesthetics; design,...
An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and through Knowledge Unlatched. Disability and the Posth...