A Cyclops, a Stone, and a Four-Breasted Woman: Drawing Anatomical Knowledge

Katherine M. Reinhart
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Drawings have a long history communicating new ideas, and in the early modern period, they were mobilized by a new form of institution—the scientific society—which emerged as a permanent structure to facilitate novel modes of pursuing and producing anatomical knowledge. This collaborative approach engendered new techniques for communicating and circulating knowledge among investigators, including innovative visual and material practices. Institutions such as the Royal Society of London and the Académie royale des sciences in Paris produced hundreds of drawings, by both artists and philosophers, in the course of their pursuits to understand the functions, structures, and diseases of the body. From depictions of bladder stones to monstrous births, drawings not only recorded anatomical investigations but often stood in for anatomical objects themselves. This essay explores how these early scientific societies created and used drawings as an important tool in their work, particularly in the study of human anatomy. From drawn accounts of dissected cadavers to recording anatomical anomalies, drawings circulated in society meetings, were debated by members, and were recorded in the institution’s minutes. This essay focuses on the materiality of drawings and their ability to preserve and perpetuate anatomical knowledge in ways that ephemeral specimens were not able to match. Based on unstudied archival drawings, this essay contends that image-making was a central component to the study of human anatomy in early scientific societies and that these drawings were a crucial tool in the process of anatomical discovery and knowledge production during their early years.
独眼巨人、石头和四乳女人:绘画解剖学知识
绘画在传播新思想方面有着悠久的历史,在现代早期,它们被一种新的机构形式——科学社会——动员起来,这种机构形式作为一种永久性的结构出现,以促进追求和产生解剖学知识的新模式。这种合作的方法产生了在研究者之间交流和传播知识的新技术,包括创新的视觉和材料实践。伦敦皇家学会和巴黎皇家科学院等机构在追求了解人体功能、结构和疾病的过程中,绘制了数百幅艺术家和哲学家的画作。从对膀胱结石的描绘到怪异的出生,绘画不仅记录了解剖调查,而且经常代表解剖对象本身。这篇文章探讨了这些早期的科学社会如何创造和使用绘画作为他们工作中的重要工具,特别是在人体解剖学的研究中。从解剖尸体的素描到解剖异常的记录,这些素描在学会会议上流传,由会员辩论,并记录在学会的会议记录中。这篇文章的重点是图纸的物质性和他们保存和延续解剖学知识的能力,以短暂的标本无法匹配的方式。基于未经研究的档案图纸,本文认为图像制作是早期科学社会中人体解剖学研究的核心组成部分,这些图纸是早期解剖学发现和知识生产过程中的关键工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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