Surgeons employ craft, cunning, and technology to open, observe, and repair patient bodies. In Bodies in Formation, anthropologist Rachel Prentice enters surgical suites increasingly packed with new medical techn...

Buy Now From Amazon

Surgeons employ craft, cunning, and technology to open, observe, and repair patient bodies. In Bodies in Formation, anthropologist Rachel Prentice enters surgical suites increasingly packed with new medical technologies to explore how surgeons are made in the early twenty-first century. Prentice argues that medical students and residents learn through practice, coming to embody unique ways of perceiving, acting, and being. Drawing on ethnographic observation in anatomy laboratories, operating rooms, and technology design groups, she shows how trainees become physicians through interactions with colleagues and patients, technologies and pathologies, bodies and persons. Bodies in Formation foregrounds the technical, ethical, and affective formation of physicians, demonstrating how, even within a world of North American biomedicine increasingly dominated by technologies for remote interventions and computerized teaching, good care remains the art of human healing.


Similar Products

Drugs for Life: How Pharmaceutical Companies Define Our Health (Experimental Futures)The Body Multiple: Ontology in Medical Practice (Science and Cultural Theory)A Nervous State: Violence, Remedies, and Reverie in Colonial CongoMedical Research for Hire: The Political Economy of Pharmaceutical Clinical Trials (Critical Issues in Health and Medicine)Malignant: How Cancer Becomes UsAfter Love: Queer Intimacy and Erotic Economies in Post-Soviet CubaFatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in the Twenty-first Century