Human Remains

Medicine, Death, and Desire in Nineteenth-Century Paris
ISBN13: 9780823233809ISBN10: 0823233804 Paperback, 304 pages
Jan 2012,  In Stock

Price:

$30.00 (01)

A Fordham University Press Publication

Description

The living and the dead cohabited Paris until the late eighteenth century, when, in the name of public health, measures were taken to drive the latter from the city. Cemeteries were removed from urban space, and corpses started to be viewed as terrifyingly noxious substances.The dead had fallen victim to a sustained new reflection on the notions of life and death that emerged from the two new medical fields of biology and hygiene. In large part, the Paris of the nineteenth century-the Paris of modernity-arose, both theoretically and physically, out of this concern over the relations between the animate and the inanimate.As the dead became a source of pervasive and intense anxiousness, they also became an object of fascination that at once exceeded and guided the medical imagination attempting to control them. Human Remains examines that exuberant anxiety to discover the irrational, indeed erotic, forces motivating the medicalization of death.Working across a broad range of disciplines, including history, literature, the visual arts, philosophy, and psychoanalysis, the book seeks to understand the meaning of the dead and their role in creating one of the most important cities of the contemporary world.

Features

  • Examines how the understanding of death underwent a profound and far-reaching change around the time of the French Revolution.
  • Combines medical history with artistic and literary production, as well as psychoanalytic theory and philosophy to examine fissures in the erotics of materiality and in the very structures of subjective identity.

Reviews

Strauss examines the role played by a medical field that had recently gained considerable prestige, and the variety of discourses that accompanied the nineteenth-century's obsessive interest in the dead, testifying to an 'inadmissible desire for the abject'. This is an important and dazzling work.-Marie-Helene Huet

A thought provoking, innovative study that combines pioneering scholarship to produce a novel vision of nineteenth-century culture and contemporary philosophy.-Mitchell Greenberg

Product Details

304 pages; 6 b&w illus.; 6 x 9; ISBN13: 978-0-8232-3380-9ISBN10: 0-8232-3380-4

About the Author(s)

Jonathan Strauss is Professor of French at Miami University. He is the author of Subjects of Terror: Nerval, Hegel, and the Modern Self.

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