Sexual Visions: Images of Gender in Science and Medicine Between the Eighteenth and Twentieth CenturiesIn six interdisciplinary and wide-ranging essays, Ludmilla Jordanova analyzes scientific and medical representations of gender in advertising, paintings, film, literature, sculpture, wax anatomical models, and professional and popular writing about the biological and medical sciences during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. She demonstrates that gender as metaphor has had an exceptionally vigorous life in the history of natural knowledge. |
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anatomical appears approach aspects associations assumptions body central century chapter claimed closely complex concept concern contained context course culture death discussed dissection distinct dominant draw eighteenth century especially example explored expressed fact female femininity France gender given hand hence historians human ideas illustrations images imaginative implies important individual interest issue kind knowledge language less linked lives London machines male masculine material meanings metaphors Metropolis Michelet models moral myths nature nineteenth century organic particular Plate political position possible practice practitioners presented produced question reason relationships representation represented reveal role science and medicine scientific Second seen sense sexual shows significance social society specific suggests themes thinking thought tradition understand understood unveiling veil vision visual whole woman women writings