An uncommon window into the medically abnormal | A Morning's Work: Medical Photographs from the Burns Archive & Collection, 1843-1939 | Stanley Burns
books:
•
A Morning's Work: Medical Photographs from the Burns Archive & Collection, 1843-1939
Stanley Burns
Twin Palms Publishers
, 1998 - 128 pages
average customer review:
based on 7 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
My god these people are beautiful
This
collection
of photographs and plates are some of the most concise findings on the
medical
world I have ever seen. It has opened my eyes to these people and has given me something new and interesting to learn about. I really enjoy seeing how far we have come in the field of medicine but also the advancement has diminished the frequency of medical oddities that are found in this book. I really recomend this to anyone who has an interest in the medical field and all of its mishaps.
Wonderfully Compelling!
Stanley
Burns
is a physician and a collector of
medical
history photographs. You may remember his previous book of mortuary photographs entitled "Sleeping Beauty" which is long out of print and fetches incredible sums among used book dealers. (Fortunately, a sequel - "Sleeping Beauty II" is more readily available.) "A
Morning
's
Work
" is a
collection
of 127 vintage medical photographs
from
1843
to
1939
along with a helpful narrative explanation of the photographs and their cultural significance. Although some of the pictures are more historically significant than interesting, the bulk of the images are of medical curiosities - and some of them are absolutely head-scratchingly bizarre. Among the images featured are mortuary photographs, images of amputations, surgical procedures, disfigurement, and a wide assortment of congenital and acquired diseases. The title "A Morning's Work" is taken from an image of a pile of amputated limbs taken during the Civil War, when the horrific wounds inflicted by the large leadshots used at the time resulted in amputations for even the most minor of injuries. Many of the photographs take us back to the Dark Days of medicine, before antiseptic procedures were implemented, and when a small wound could result in a deadly infection in a matter of days.
The narrative explanations of the photographs add a special poignance to them. For example, a photograph of a dead man would not be nearly so interesting were it not for Burns' explanation that the man was Dr. James Howe who contracted Cholera while treating patients during the St. Louis epidemic of 1849 and was fatally afflicted. That one sombre portrait seems to symbolize the bravery and sacrifice of physicians the world over during times of pestilence, and if there's anything that you come away with after viewing this book, it's a newfound appreciation for modern medicine. All told, "A Morning's Work" is a fascinating book - and a must for enthusiasts of the bizarre and medical historians alike.
for more information click here
An uncommon window into the medically abnormal
This book of stunning, yet disturbing, photographs of
medical
anomalies spanning 100 years
from
the mid-19th c., may not be for everyone. It is a comprehensive visual essay into things that we find fascinating, yet repulsive. Unlike a carnival sideshow, however, the purpose of this wonderful book is not to cynically trivialize the individuals illustrated. Like the Mütter Museum, (Mütter Museum: Philadelphia College of Physicians, 19 South 22nd Street, between Chestnut and Market Hours: Mon-Sat 10am-4pm, Sun 12-4pm), Stanley
Burns
' book is a window into the 19th century propensity to gather esoteric information of all types, organize it and, ultimately, to exhibit it as the means to greater knowledge.
for more information click here
for more information click here
Stunning look at human body
This book is very harsh, unpleasant, but impressive. Not at all for anybody because you need to have the guts to keep your glance at the pictures mirroring the abnormal, the illnesses, the horror of nature, the facts of the old times of surgery. As Bacon's paintings these pictures have a very sui-generis aesthetics, based upon the ugly and the deformity.
reference with artistry
definitely worth the price tag. Book is packed with period
medical
photographs, which while grotesque are also very artistically framed. All of the pictures are together, a page per picture so you can flip though the images without text interrupting the artistic presentation. The back of the book is devoted to thorough captions for each photo. Some of the photos look staged but this too fits the period represented.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
hot
or
not?
What's your opinion?
Write a review and share your thoughts!
recommendations
We are but a series of tubes
Shroud-eating Good Times
"Art Industry Books"
SUMMER IN PARADISE 2
list2
photographs
iPhoto '08: The Missing Manual
Black and White Photography, Third Revised Edition
Understanding Exposure: How to Shoot Great Photographs with a Film or ...
Master Lighting Guide for Portrait Photographers
Photography (9th Edition)
collection
My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands
The One Minute Manager
How to Read Literature Like a Professor: A Lively and Entertaining ...
Goodnight Bush: A Parody
You: On A Diet: The Owner's Manual for Waist Management
archive
WarCraft War of the Ancients Archive (Warcraft)
WarCraft Archive (Warcraft)
Creepy Archives
Herbie Archives Volume 1 (Archive Editions (Graphic Novels))
Scanning Negatives and Slides: Digitizing Your Photographic Archives
search for books
1843-1939
,
archive
,
burns
,
collection
,
medical
,
morning
,
photographs
books:
*
Flowers for London Flower Delivery UK by online florists
*
London Wedding Photographer
randomly chosen
sporting goods:
2003 Bowman's Best BB-CSS Corey Shafer Orioles (RC - Rookie - Autographed ...
home
impressum - about us