Literature DB >> 18791297

Cultures of death and politics of corpse supply: anatomy in Vienna, 1848-1914.

Tatjana Buklijas1.   

Abstract

Nineteenth-century Vienna is well known to medical historians as a leading center of medical research and education, offering easy access to patients and corpses to students from all over the world. The author seeks to explain how this enviable supply of cadavers was achieved, why it provoked so little opposition at a time when Britain and the United States saw widespread protests against dissection, and how it was threatened from mid-century onward. To understand permissive Viennese attitudes, we need to place them in a longue durée history of death and dissection and to pay close attention to the city's political geography as it was transformed into a major imperial capital. The tolerant stance of the Roman Catholic Church, strong links to Southern Europe, and the weak position of individuals in the absolutist state all contributed to an idiosyncratic anatomical culture. But as the fame of the Vienna medical school peaked in the later 1800s, the increased demand created by rising numbers of students combined with intensified interdisciplinary competition to produce a shortfall that professors found increasingly difficult to meet. Around 1900, new religious groups and mass political parties challenged long-standing anatomical practice by refusing to supply cadavers and making dissection into an instrument of political struggle. This study of the material preconditions for anatomy at one of Europe's most influential medical schools provides a contrast to the dominant Anglo-American histories of death and dissection.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18791297      PMCID: PMC2633446          DOI: 10.1353/bhm.0.0086

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  20 in total

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3.  The city as a context for scientific activity: creating the Mediziner-Viertel in fin-de-siècle Vienna.

Authors:  Maria Rentetzi
Journal:  Endeavour       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 0.444

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Journal:  Sudhoffs Arch       Date:  1992

5.  Eduard Pernkopf's atlas of anatomy or: the fiction of "pure science".

Authors:  P Malina
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  1998-02-27       Impact factor: 1.704

6.  The history of Eduard Pernkopf's Topographische Anatomie des Menschen.

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Journal:  J Biocommun       Date:  1988

7.  Carl Rokitansky: a reassessment of the hematohumoral theory of disease.

Authors:  R J Miciotto
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1978       Impact factor: 1.314

8.  The "Paris manner" of dissection: student anatomical dissection in early eighteenth-century Paris.

Authors:  T Gelfand
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1972 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.314

9.  "Metropolis and province, science in British culture, 1780-1850." By Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell. Essay review.

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10.  A pauper dead-house: the expansion of the Cambridge anatomical teaching school under the late-Victorian poor law, 1870-1914.

Authors:  Elizabeth T Hurren
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 1.419

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  5 in total

1.  Evaluation of influences of the Viennese Anatomical School on the work of the Croatian Anatomist Jelena Krmpotic-Nemanic.

Authors:  Kristijan Dinjar; Jurica Toth; Bruno Atalic; Danijela Radanovic; Svjetlana Maric
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2011-09-15       Impact factor: 1.704

2.  Description of in-hospital deaths in Vienna during 1850-2000.

Authors:  Doris Höflmayer; Eduard Winter; Thomas Wasserscheid; Katalin Vig-Kuna; Walter Feigl
Journal:  Wien Med Wochenschr       Date:  2016-06-20

3.  [Double standards : The Medical Student Kurt Gerstein and the History of Anatomical Body Procurement in Germany].

Authors:  Mathias Schütz
Journal:  NTM       Date:  2018-06

4.  The Dawn of Modern Pathology.

Authors:  Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos
Journal:  Autops Case Rep       Date:  2016-03-30

5.  Post-Mortem Pedagogy: A Brief History of the Practice of Anatomical Dissection.

Authors:  Connor T A Brenna
Journal:  Rambam Maimonides Med J       Date:  2021-01-19
  5 in total

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