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Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural History of Aesthetic Surgery
 
 
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Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural History of Aesthetic Surgery [Paperback]

Sander L. Gilman
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Customers buy this book with Venus Envy: A History of Cosmetic Surgery £14.50

Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural History of Aesthetic Surgery + Venus Envy: A History of Cosmetic Surgery
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Product details

  • Paperback: 424 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press; New Ed edition (23 Oct 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0691070539
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691070537
  • Product Dimensions: 23.9 x 16.4 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 947,841 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Sander L. Gilman
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Review

A [wide-ranging] and enjoyable work. . . . Gilman has an eye for detail, yet remains aware of the wider perspective. He also raises important questions. . . . In [this] rich, elegant and beautiful [book] he shows that the history of aesthetic surgery is too important to be left to the surgeons. -- Jonathan Cole, Times Literary Supplement

There is one theme that links all [Gilman's] work: how human beings construct images of others to define themselves. . . . [He] has been unafraid to examine areas that academics have traditionally shied away from. -- "The New York Times

[A] readable and useful book. . . . Through Mr. Gilman's long lens, the search for beauty and the fashion for plastic surgery are not a contemporary ill, but something older and more universal. -- "The Economist Review

[Gilman] tells a strange, macabre, and often richly comic story of shifting desires. His book shows a dazzling European erudition. . . . There is now less furtiveness attached to aesthetic surgery. But the question remains--and Gilman asks it cleverly, humanely, and persistently--whether new appearances just gloss over old problems and often create new ones. -- "New York Review of Books

Far from the body representing immutable essences of beauty or horror, the history of aesthetic surgery confirms that the body bears witness to public ideologies of sexual and racial difference. And the body has its own invisible memories of tragedy from which, for some, aesthetic surgery offers the promise of transcendence. -- Beatrix Campbell, The Independent

Bravely navigating the ethnic maze with admirable aplomb, . . . [Sander Gilman] considers nearly every hyphenated group's American dream of becoming something else. He gets away with such brazenness . . . by constantly offering entertaining literary and pop culture references upon which we can all hang our hats. -- Margo Hammond, The New York Observer

A fascinating combination of text and illustration and of literary, medical, and scientific information. A thoughtful history by an author who knows his material well and has a sympathetic understanding of human beings as well as a lively sense of humor. -- "Booklist

A fascinating and provocative book. . . . -- "Library Journal

[Gilman's] fast-paced narrative blends cultural criticism with discussion of medical techniques and ethics in a thoughtful study that should appeal to both a lay and professional readership. -- "Publishers Weekly

With its bizarre amalgam of new developments in medicine and prevailing trends in fashion, "aesthetic surgery" is a phenomenon that begs for examination, and Gilman, as both historian and critic, proves equal to the task. . . . Face-lifts, nose jobs, liposuction, decircumcision, buttocks implants, breast augmentation, and breast reduction, among other procedures, present themselves, Gilman dryly notes, as surgical cures for what is often essentially a psychological problem--a persistent sense of discontent. -- Holly Brubach, The Atlantic Monthly

Rich in both detail and fascinating illustrations, Gilman's history shows aesthetic surgery as a response to the exigencies of contemporary cultures. -- Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles, Isis

Gilman's research is thorough, his analysis thoughtful, and the presentation thought-provoking. -- "Choice

Making the Body Beautiful is an important contribution to our understanding of th emergence and significance of aesthetic surgery. It is a must for anyone concerned with our present cultural obsession with beauty and the makability of the body. And it provides a model for writing medical history that is not limited to charting the facts, but tries to understand their meaning as well. -- Kathy Davis, Bulletin of the History of Medicine

A richly illustrated, delightfully crafted cultural history of aesthetic surgery . . . An informative and captivating history of our attempts to make our bodies beautiful. -- Londa Schiebinger, American Historical Review

Gilman tells a timely, yet previously largely untold tale. By presenting the complex interaction of ideas, social relations, technology, psychiatry (and the madness of doctors as well as patients), the author makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of our times. -- Erika Bourguignon, The Antioch Review

Kathy Davis, Bulletin of the History of Medicine

It is a 'must' for anyone concerned with our present cultural obsession with beauty and the makability of the body.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
IN A WORLD in which we are judged by how we appear, the belief that we can change our appearance is liberating. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Oh, look: another fantasticaly readable and informative book from Sander Gilman. Who'd have thought it? As usual, Gilamn casts his ironic eye over past cultural constructions of the human body, narrating this tale of aesthetic surgery with a quizzical wit and a deployment of his old analytical favourites (Freud and race theories)which he never allows to obscure his central line of argument: how do we 'pass' as humans? He suggests that it is culture that produces bodily norms and that (after Judith Butler, perhaps?) we are all in some way induced to act up to these prescriptions. In its most extreme form, this role-play becomes inscribed upon the flesh of our very bodies: cosmetic (or, as he has it, 'aesthetic') surgery. Get ready then for a grotesque cavalcade of syphillitic noses; designer vaginas; prosthetic penises; boob-jobs and liposuction. Gilman draws on a wide range of sources in popular culture and (thankfully) makes only basic reference to the institutional medical science behind the specialities -this is more about *why* we undergo aesthetic surgery and how society/culture views it than the actual procedures and medical advances themselves. Read in conjunction with Elizabeth Haiken's "Venus Envy" this book provides a fabulous overview of the culturalproduction of bodily norms.
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Amazon.com:  3 reviews
7 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Hardly Dead 20 May 2004
By Bruce E. Henderson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The other critic seems to suggest that historical research has no value--only the voices of the present are of use to him. His loss--Gilman is an amazing historian and insightful interpreter of social customs and texts--and there is much to be learned from any book he writes.
The Sociology of Surgery 1 May 2010
By Tristan de Chalain - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Sander Gilman has delivered an intellectual tour de force in his book Making The Body Beautifu: A cultural history of aesthetic surgery. In nine chapters he covers such fields as the rise and development of surgery, how surgery designed to specifically alter appearance rather than fight disease or stave off death, became not only possible, but socially acceptable; the racial and cultural drivers that underpinned demand for such procedures as otoplasty ( pinning back ears) and rhinoplasty (reshaping noses); and the rise of the social cult of the body erotic, the body beautiful and the war on aging. He explores the impact of the mutilating injuries of the great war on the development of surgery and he deals with the issues around trans-gender dysphoria and surgery designed to alter the outward sexuality of the human body.
His research is detailed and impeccable and his writing easy to read. This book is a "must-have" text for anyone interested in the two-way interaction between between Society at large and the microcosm of surgical intervention. It is both a useful reference for the academic or surgeon and a fascinating read for the interested layman.
19 of 62 people found the following review helpful
Great idea but no cigar! 19 Feb 2000
By Robert Payne - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Sander Gilman makes a good start on a great topic, but after a couple of chapters he falters and seems to loose his grip. Starting with some great tid-bits about plastic surgery ranging from buttock lifts to nose replacement, he wanders into an extended and boring research about Jewish hooked. Not satisfied, he adds an additional chapter about social history of the Jewish nose--perhaps interesting to some, but not what was promised in the title. From there the book is nothing but speculation from dead reaserch.

Two types of research are available for a writer: Live research and dead research. Live research consists mostly of interviews, discussions and question asking. Gilman will have none of it. His is dead research from cover to cover, finding his material mostly in the musty records of the 19th century. Even his photos and illustrations are from 100 years ago. To make matters worse, the publisher printed all the graphics ordinary book paper making them very blurry and almost impossible to decipher.

Most irritating of all is his habit of repeating his thesis on almost most every page as if he feels compelled to shove it down our throats. He tells us at least fifty times that people get plastic surgery in order to "pass" and feel happy. Come on Sander, enough is enough.

In sum: Sander Gilman, like Bill Clinton, starts with great promise but then proceeds to make a real mess of things.

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