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  • Acknowledgements  ix
    Introduction  1
    1. "A Fascinating Object"  33
    2. Cutting Dissection  69
    3. Cultivating the Physician's Body  103
    4. Techniques and Ethics in the Operating Room  137
    5. Swimming in the Joint  171
    6. Enterprising Bodies in the Laboratory  199
    7.The Anatomy of a Surgical Simulation  227
    Conclusion  253
    Notes  267
    References  277
    Index  289
  • Bodies in Formation offers a thoughtful negotiation of the shifting and complex relationships of medicine and technology in a field where the bodies of the patient, student and practitioner are constantly worked upon – and where ways of doing and forms of knowing are perpetually at stake.”—Talia Gordon, Somatosphere

    “With adept prose that is both thorough and light on its feet, Prentice’s close and careful ethnography of anatomy and surgical education both helpfully engages and innovatively advances the social scientific study of surgery and embodied learning, more broadly.”—Eric Plemons, Anthropological Quarterly

    Reviews

  • Bodies in Formation offers a thoughtful negotiation of the shifting and complex relationships of medicine and technology in a field where the bodies of the patient, student and practitioner are constantly worked upon – and where ways of doing and forms of knowing are perpetually at stake.”—Talia Gordon, Somatosphere

    “With adept prose that is both thorough and light on its feet, Prentice’s close and careful ethnography of anatomy and surgical education both helpfully engages and innovatively advances the social scientific study of surgery and embodied learning, more broadly.”—Eric Plemons, Anthropological Quarterly

  • "In this exceptional work, Rachel Prentice attends to the practices of surgical training and mastery, as well as the ethical problems posed by technological innovation. Given these problems, she suggests that our conceptualizations of the ethical in surgery might be productively rethought. There is no other book like this one; Prentice effectively places bodily practice at the center of questions of reason, innovation, technique, and ethics in science studies."—Lawrence Cohen, author of No Aging in India: Alzheimer's, the Bad Family, and Other Modern Things

    "Bodies in Formation is a superb ethnography about learning how to practice anatomy and surgery and the challenge posed by the innovation of simulator training. Rachel Prentice deftly charts how students and residents embody germane perceptions, emotions, control, and ethics, as crucial to their training as is cognitive knowledge. She argues convincingly that technologically mediated training does not, as yet, transcend the art of medicine."—Margaret Lock, author of Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death

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  • Description

    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.

    About The Author(s)

    Rachel Prentice is Associate Professor of Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University.
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