|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Those convicted of homicide were hanged on the public gallows
before being dissected under the Murder Act in Georgian England.
Yet, from 1752, whether criminals actually died on the hanging tree
or in the dissection room remained a medical mystery in early
modern society. Dissecting the Criminal Corpse takes issue with the
historical cliche of corpses dangling from the hangman's rope in
crime studies. Some convicted murderers did survive execution in
early modern England. Establishing medical death in the
heart-lungs-brain was a physical enigma. Criminals had large
bull-necks, strong willpowers, and hearty survival instincts.
Extreme hypothermia often disguised coma in a prisoner hanged in
the winter cold. The youngest and fittest were capable of reviving
on the dissection table. Many died under the lancet. Capital
legislation disguised a complex medical choreography that surgeons
staged. They broke the Hippocratic Oath by executing the Dangerous
Dead across England from 1752 until 1832. This book is open access
under a CC-BY license.
In this discipline-redefining book, Elizabeth T. Hurren maps the
post-mortem journeys of bodies, body-parts, organs, and brains,
inside the secretive culture of modern British medical research
after WWII as the bodies of the deceased were harvested as
bio-commons. Often the human stories behind these bodies were
dissected, discarded, or destroyed in death. Hidden Histories of
the Dead recovers human faces and supply-lines in the archives that
medical science neglected to acknowledge. It investigates the
medical ethics of organ donation, the legal ambiguities of a lack
of fully-informed consent and the shifting boundaries of life and
re-defining of medical death in a biotechnological era. Hurren
reveals the implicit, explicit and missed body disputes that took
second-place to the economics of the national and international
commodification of human material in global medical sciences of the
Genome era. This title is also available as Open Access.
A fresh look at the complex question of outdoor poor relief in the
nineteenth century. The consequences of extreme poverty were a grim
reality for all too many people in Victorian England. The various
poor laws implemented to try to deal with it contained a number of
controversial measures, one of the most radical and unpopular being
the crusade against outdoor relief, during which central government
sought to halt all welfare payments at home. Via a close case study
of Brixworth union in Northamptonshire, which offers an unusually
richcorpus of primary material and evidence, the author looks at
what happened to those impoverished men and women who struggled to
live independently in a world-without-welfare outside the
workhouse. She retraces the experiences ofelderly paupers evicted
from almshouses, of the children of the aged poor prosecuted for
parental maintenance, of dying paupers who were refused medical
care in their homes, and of women begging for funeral costs in an
attempt toprevent the bodies of their loved ones being taken for
dissection by anatomists. She then shows how increasing
democratisation gave the labouring poor the means to win control of
the poor law. ELIZABETH T. HURREN is a Reader in the Medical
Humanities, University of Leicester.
In this discipline-redefining book, Elizabeth T. Hurren maps the
post-mortem journeys of bodies, body-parts, organs, and brains,
inside the secretive culture of modern British medical research
after WWII as the bodies of the deceased were harvested as
bio-commons. Often the human stories behind these bodies were
dissected, discarded, or destroyed in death. Hidden Histories of
the Dead recovers human faces and supply-lines in the archives that
medical science neglected to acknowledge. It investigates the
medical ethics of organ donation, the legal ambiguities of a lack
of fully-informed consent and the shifting boundaries of life and
re-defining of medical death in a biotechnological era. Hurren
reveals the implicit, explicit and missed body disputes that took
second-place to the economics of the national and international
commodification of human material in global medical sciences of the
Genome era. This title is also available as Open Access.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Caracal
Disclosure
CD
R48
Discovery Miles 480
|