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Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (Swansea University College of Arts and Humanities, Fareham), Edited by (Swansea University, UK)
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What is a face and how does it relate to personhood? Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present offers an interdisciplinary exploration of the many ways in which faces have been represented in the past and present, focusing on the issue of facial difference and disfigurement read in the light of shifting ideas of beauty and ugliness.

Faces are central to all human social interactions, yet their study has been much overlooked by disability scholars and historians of medicine alike. By examining the main linguistic, visual and material approaches to the face from antiquity to contemporary times, contributors place facial diversity at the heart of our historical and cultural narratives.

This cutting-edge collection of essays will be an invaluable resource for humanities scholars working across history, literature and visual culture, as well as modern practitioners in education and psychology.

Recenzijas

This extraordinary collection of essays reveals the ways in which the intersections of gender, cultural notions of beauty and wholeness, and physical difference articulate how people in the West respond to human faces. By explicating the relationship between facial difference and notions of moral soundness, disease, and anxietyand its apparent continuity throughout the whole of European historythe editors and contributors challenge readers and researchers to re-evaluate modern-day assumptions about beauty and difference based upon their presentation of the past. * Linda E. Mitchell, Professor of History, University of Missouri-Kansas City, USA * This engaging multi-disciplinary study encourages us to look at the face and its multiple facets from a variety of points of view. It is a much-needed first step in gaining a better, more holistic understanding of the face and its perceptions throughout time. * Marjorie Gehrhardt, Lecturer in French History, University of Reading, UK *

Papildus informācija

An interdisciplinary analysis of facial difference and disfigurement from antiquity to contemporary times.
List of Illustrations
vii
Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgements xi
1 Introduction: Situating the Different Face
1(10)
Emily Cock
Patricia Skinner
Part 1 Language
2 Dis/enabling Courtesy and Chivalry in the Middle English and Early Modern
11(15)
Gawain Romances
Ballads Bonnie Millar
3 `A Great Blemish to her Beauty': Female Facial Disfigurement in Early Modern England
26(18)
Michelle Webb
4 Does Researching Disfigurement Risk Perpetuating Stigma?
44(21)
Jane Frances
Part 2 Visibility
5 Hair Loss as Facial Disfigurement in Ancient Rome?
65(19)
Jane Draycott
6 Portraits, Likenesses, Composites? Facial Difference in Forensic Art
84(28)
Kathryn Smith
7 From `Staring' to `Not Caring': Development of Psychological Growth and Well-Being among Adults with Cleft Lip and Palate
112(20)
Patricia Neville
Andrea Waylen
Aidan Searle
8 Making up the Female Face: Pain and Imagination in the Music Videos of CocoRosie
132(29)
Morna Laing
Part 3 Materiality
9 Archaeological Facial Depiction for People from the Past with Facial Differences
161(16)
Caroline Wilkinson
10 `Trotule (Trotula) Puts Many Things on to Decorate and Embellish the Face but I Intend Solely to Remove Infection': L'Abbe Poutrel and his Chirurgerie c.1300 in Context
177(15)
Theresa Tyers
11 Disrupting Our Sense of the Past: Medical Photographs that Push Interpreters to the Limits of Historical Analysis
192(27)
Jason Bate
Bibliography 219(28)
Index 247
Patricia Skinner is Research Professor in History at Swansea University, UK. She is also co-editor of Social History of Medicine.

Emily Cock is Honorary Research Fellow in the Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Research at Swansea University, UK.