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World Famous Comics: The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human Body in Renaissance Culture
The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human Body in Renaissance Culture
By: Jonathan Sawday
Publisher: Routledge
Average Rating:5.00 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Paperback
Label: Routledge
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 344
Publication Date: November 15, 1996

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The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human Body in Renaissance Culture
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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
An outstanding piece of interdisciplinary scholarship, The Body Emblazoned is a study of the Renaissance culture of dissection which informed intellectual inquiry in Europe for nearly two hundred years. Though the dazzling displays in Renaissance art and literature of the exterior of the body have long been a subject of enquiry, Jonathan Sawday considers in detail the interior of the body, and what it meant to men and women in early modern culture.

Sawday links the frequently illicit activities of the great anatomists of the period, to whose labors we are indebted for so much of our understanding of the structure and operation of the human body, to a wider cultural discourse which embraces not only the great moments of Renaissance art, but the very foundation of a modern idea of knowledge. Illustrated with thirty-two black and white prints, The Body Emblazoned re-assesses modern understanding not only of the literature and culture of the Renaissance, but of the modern organization of knowledge which is now so familiar that it is only rarely questioned.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:5.00 out of 5.00 stars

5 out of 5 starsThe Renaissance anatomized
The Body Emblazoned is a wide-ranging History of what the Author terms the Renaissance Culture of Dissection. In so doing, its medical, scientific, philosophical, sociological, legal and artistic aspects are opened and cut up for our perusal. The Author demonstrates how the nature of the practice of anatomy changed over the period from, in his analogy, a voyage of discovery to a kind of colonisation through taxonomy, a classification and naming of parts. We are shown a sea-change in understanding, as the prevailing model for the body's inner workings was transformed from Microcosm to Mechanism. Along the way, we learn of the many difficulties in obtaining cadavers for dissection, of the curious architecture of anatomy theatres, and of how Rembrandt and Descartes might have met in the butchers' shops of 17th century Amsterdam. Mr. Sawday's Lit. Crit. background serves him well in his penetrating analyses of anatomical reference in the works of Spenser, Donne, Carew, Cavendish and Traherne, among others, but elsewhere it seems obtrusive, in the guise of barely relevant references to Freud, Deleuze and Joyce, for example, and in a somewhat irritating overuse of inverted 'commas'. Another irritation is the Author's heavy-handed moralizing: he is too anxious to spell out how oppressive, or misogynist, or cruel are the opinions and actions of the anatomists and their ilk: in my opinion such observations have more force when readers are left to draw their own moral conclusions. That said, one by no means has to agree with a book in order to enjoy it, and this one never lost my interest. It is a most intelligent and stimulating work, skilfully presented and nicely illustrated too.



5 out of 5 starssolid, but winged
I'm surprised that this book has not already been rated by some enthusiastic reader. This is a book which deserves a wider readership. Written is a style that is decidely British, it flows with weight and grace. The content of this book is as the title would have it, but sheds insight into so much more. It is not about the science of Anatomy so much as it is about the (anti-)religious undercurrents that drove the West to embark upon this macabre science. The making of the paradigm of Western science--an apotheosis of the Platonic Idea made material-- can be seen here: The object of its study, for the West, must be dead, and unmoving. The author's depiction of the rise of Anatomy as a Science makes one aware that the European conquest of the Americas, for example, started out in a manner that is so "anatomical": Kill first(the Mayas, for example), then dissect and classify. (I recommend reading Eduardo Galeano's Trilogy as a running commetary to Sawday's great work.) The whole epistemological structure of Western science and Myth is laid bare on the operating table presided over by the good doctor Vesalius, whose name means "Weasle". On the table? You guessed it. An accidental meeting of a sewing machine and an umbrella: That rendezvous posing as a woman (Eve, really), exposing. bloodlessly, her intestines to show the Labyrinth of the World, who will be reincarnated several hundred years later as Breton's "Nadja". It is a coincidence of the most cabalistic kind to note that the year Vesalius publishes his work on Anatomy, Kepler publishes his work on the Orbit of the Planets. Both men were interested in Labyriths and the number 4.


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