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OverviewAn interdisciplinary approach to medical history that shows the key role that drawings and photographs had in shaping the material, professional, emotional and aesthetic parameters of plastic surgery. Plastic surgery in twentieth-century Britain was a medical discipline with deep ties to art, artists and art history. It was also a field still in the process of creating its reputation and its archives. Putting Plastic Surgery on Paper examines these archives, focusing in particular on the works on paper held within these collections by two artists: Diana ""Dickie"" Orpen and Percy Hennell. Plastic surgeons depended upon the drawings and photographs made by these and other medical illustrators to craft certain narratives about their field and their surgical practice. In addition to telling an art history of plastic surgery during this period, Putting Plastic Surgery on Paper engages with the affective parameters of archival objects, and with what working as a historian involves when done within potentially traumatic spaces. Paying particular attention to the emotional dimensions and effects of this visual culture and the ways in which it is archived and framed by the discipline of plastic surgery - then and now - Putting Plastic Surgery on Paper explores not only what it meant to make art in a surgical space but also what it means to study these affecting paper objects in the archive today. This book is available as Open Access under the Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Professor Christine SloboginPublisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd Imprint: University of Rochester Press Weight: 0.666kg ISBN: 9781648251207ISBN 10: 164825120 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 24 June 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction Part I: Approaching the Archive 1. Collecting Affect: Emotion, Empathy, and the Surgical Archive 2. Narratives of the BAPRAS Archive 3. Counternarratives of the BAPRAS Archive Part II: Putting Plastic Surgery on Paper 4. Dickie Orpen: Identity, Pedagogy, and Medico-Artistic Looking 5. Plastic Humor: Dickie Orpen's Palliative and Queer Cartoons 6. Percy Hennell: Color, Place, and Surgical Emotion 7. ""Something Useful in a National Sense"": Percy Hennell's Photography as Propaganda Conclusion Bibliography IndexReviewsIn this sensitive and nuanced book, Dr. Christine Slobogin offers us a holistic history of the intersection between art and surgery, highlighting the importance of surgical art as medicine. She excavates the story of two key and often overlooked figures in surgical art as important practitioners of the humor and art of medical and surgical practice, making visible the multitude of ways that patients can see and be seen through the historical and medical record of visual culture. * Prof Sharrona Pearl, Andrews Chair of Interdisciplinary Studies in The John V. Roach Honors College, Texas Christian University * Putting Plastic Surgery on Paper reminds us that the history of medicine needs art history. Beginning with the premise that visual culture lies at the center of plastic surgery and its archives, the book demonstrates how much we have to gain by looking closely at medical illustrations, analyzing them in relation to both clinical and non-clinical images, and reading through a critical lens the biography of the surgeon as artist. This remarkably interdisciplinary book also models deeply ethical research as historians struggle to retrieve, and safeguard, patient experiences. * Tanya Sheehan, Ellerton M. and Edith K. Jetté Professor of Art, Colby College * Author InformationCHRISTINE SLOBOGIN, an art historian of medicine, is an Assistant Professor of Health Humanities and Bioethics at the University of Rochester. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |