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Book Review
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Volume 333:1717-1718 December 21, 1995 Number 25
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Picturing Health and Illness: Images of identity and difference

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By Sander L. Gilman. 200 pp. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995. $29.95. ISBN 0-8018-5197-1.

Before getting down to the business of examining representations of illness and health in a variety of visual media, Sander Gilman takes the reader on an instructive tour of the use of illustrations in histories of medicine. The most common use of the image, he finds, is as a "window into reality." This is as much the case for high-gloss coffee-table books that tell the story of modern medicine as it is for more scholarly histories. In each case, authors create historical narratives and use images to illustrate them. This method limits the image, binding it to one meaning only, . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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