Fitzharris, Lindsey (Author)
Winner, 2018 PEN/E.O. Wilson Prize for Literary Science Writing, Short-listed for the 2018 Wellcome Book Prize, A Top 10 Science Book of Fall 2017―Publishers Weekly, A Best History Book of 2017 ― The Guardian, "Warning: She spares no detail!" ―Erik Larson, bestselling author of Dead Wake In The Butchering Art, the historian Lindsey Fitzharris reveals the shocking world of nineteenth-century surgery and shows how it was transformed by advances made in germ theory and antiseptics between 1860 and 1875. She conjures up early operating theaters―no place for the squeamish―and surgeons, who, working before anesthesia, were lauded for their speed and brute strength. These pioneers knew that the aftermath of surgery was often more dangerous than patients’ afflictions, and they were baffled by the persistent infections that kept mortality rates stubbornly high. At a time when surgery couldn’t have been more hazardous, an unlikely figure stepped forward: a young, melancholy Quaker surgeon named Joseph Lister, who would solve the riddle and change the course of history. Fitzharris dramatically reconstructs Lister’s career path to his audacious claim that germs were the source of all infection and could be countered by a sterilizing agent applied to wounds. She introduces us to Lister’s contemporaries―some of them brilliant, some outright criminal―and leads us through the grimy schools and squalid hospitals where they learned their art, the dead houses where they studied, and the cemeteries they ransacked for cadavers. Eerie and illuminating, The Butchering Art celebrates the triumph of a visionary surgeon whose quest to unite science and medicine delivered us into the modern world.
...MoreReview Anne Crowther (2020) Review of "The Butchering Art: Joseph Lister's Quest to Transform the Grisly World of Victorian Medicine". Social History of Medicine (pp. 340-341).
Article
Worboys, Michael;
(2013)
Joseph Lister and the Performance of Antiseptic Surgery
Article
Kernahan, Peter J.;
(2009)
Causation and Cleanliness: George Callender, Wounds, and the Debates over Listerism
Article
Worboys, Michael;
(2013)
Joseph Lister and the Performance of Antiseptic Surgery
Article
Hurwitz, Brian;
Dupree, Marguerite W.;
(2013)
Learning from Lister: Antisepsis, Safer Surgery and Global Health
Article
Kirkup, John;
(2013)
Lord Lister's Antiseptic Steam Spray
Article
Crowther, M. Anne;
(2013)
Lister at Home and Abroad: A Continuing Legacy
Article
Richardson, Ruth;
(2013)
Inflammation, Suppuration, Putrefaction, Fermentation: Joseph Lister's Microbiology
Article
Thomas Schlich;
(2020)
No Time for Statistics: Joseph Lister's Antisepsis and Types of Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century British Surgery
Article
Schlich, Thomas;
(2013)
Farmer to Industrialist: Lister's Antisepsis and the Making of Modern Surgery in Germany
Article
Richardson, Ruth;
Rhodes, Bryan;
(2013)
Joseph Lister's First Operation
Article
Schlich, Thomas;
(2013)
Farmer to Industrialist: Lister's Antisepsis and the Making of Modern Surgery in Germany
Book
Crowther, M. Anne;
Dupree, Marguerite W.;
(2007)
Medical Lives in the Age of Surgical Revolution
Article
John Kirkup;
(2016)
Lord Lister’s Antiseptic Steam Spray
Article
Jessney, Benn;
(2012)
Joseph Lister (1827--1912): A Pioneer of Antiseptic Surgery Remembered a Century after His Death
Article
Crowther, M. Anne;
(2013)
Lister at Home and Abroad: A Continuing Legacy
Thesis
Gaw, Jerry L.;
(1990)
“A time to heal”: The diffusion of Listerian doctrine in Victorian Britain
Article
Igor Telichkin;
(2015)
Nikolay Ivanovich Pirogov (1810–1881) and Bernhard von Langenbeck (1810–1887): Similarities on the Anniversary of Their 200th Birthdays
Article
Schlich, Thomas;
(2008)
Ein Netzwerk von Kontrolltechnologien: Eine neue Perspektive auf die Entstehung der modernen Chirurgie
Article
Bovine, Gary;
(2012)
The Films of Sir Herbert Barker's (1869--1950) Manipulative Techniques
Article
Santer, Melvin;
(2010)
Joseph Lister: First Use of a Bacterium as a “Model Organism” to Illustrate the Cause of Infectious Disease of Humans
Be the first to comment!