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- Title
Nature or Artifice? Grafting in Early Modern Surgery and Agronomy.
- Authors
SAVOIA, PAOLO
- Abstract
In 1597, Gaspare Tagliacozzi published a famous two-volume book on "plastic surgery." The reconstructive technique he described was based on grafting skin taken from the arm onto the mutilated parts of the patient's damaged face - especially noses. This paper focuses on techniques of grafting, the "culture of grafting," and the relationships between surgery and plant sciences in the sixteenth century. By describing the fascination with grafting in surgery, natural history, gardening, and agronomy the paper argues that grafting techniques were subject to delicate issues: to what extent it was morally acceptable to deceive the eye with artificial entities? and what was the status of the product of a surgical procedure that challenged the traditional natural/artificial distinction? Finally, this paper shows how in the seventeenth century grafting survived the crisis of Galenism by discussing the role it played in teratology and in controversies on the uses the new mechanistic anatomy.
- Subjects
TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc.; GRAFTING (Horticulture); HISTORY of surgery; AGRONOMY; HISTORY of medicine; HISTORY
- Publication
Journal of the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences, 2017, Vol 72, Issue 1, p67
- ISSN
0022-5045
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/jhmas/jrw039