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El. knyga: Sight Correction: Vision and Blindness in Eighteenth-Century Britain

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"This book is both an empirical study of the mechanics, economics, and personal accounts of eye surgery and an exploration of the lives of historical people who were affected by vision and its failure, from eye-care specialists to blind writers who couldnot be cured"--

The debut publication in a new series devoted to the body as an object of historical study, Sight Correction provides an expansive analysis of blindness in eighteenth-century Britain, developing a new methodology for conceptualizing sight impairment. Beginning with a reconsideration of the place of sight correction as both idea and reality in eighteenth-century philosophical debates, Chris Mounsey traces the development of eye surgery by pioneers such as William Read, Mary Cater, and John Taylor, who developed a new idea of medical specialism that has shaped contemporary practices. He then turns to accounts by the visually impaired themselves, exploring how Thomas Gills, John Maxwell, and Priscilla Pointon deployed literature strategically as a necessary response to the inadequacies of Poor Laws to support blind people. Situating blindness philosophically, medically, and economically in the eighteenth century, Sight Correction shows how the lives of both the blind and those who sought to treat them redefined blindness in ways that continue to inform our understanding today.

Recenzijos

Mounsey rejects binary categories such as disabled and able-bodied, as well as the prevailing medical and cultural models, and provides a meaningful framework to talk about the life experiences of impaired individuals living in the eighteenth century and, I would argue, in earlier periods as well."

"An important book boasting extraordinary archival material and meticulous scholarship.

Acknowledgments vii
PART I Philosophy
1 Philosophy, Sight, and Blindnes
3(13)
2 Blindness Is Not a "Disability": Before Compulsory Able-Bodiedness
16(23)
3 Text as Theory: Understanding Sight and Blindness in the Eighteenth Century
39(26)
PART II Medicine
4 Unofficial Eye Care: William Read and Mary Cater
65(40)
5 Official Eye Care: William Cheselden and Peter Kennedy
105(24)
6 A Profession of Couching: John "Chevalier" Taylor
129(39)
7 Free and Accessible Eye Care for All: John Taylor, Oculist of Hatton Garden
168(31)
PART III Lives
8 Thomas Gills of St. Edmunds-Bury and the Itinerant Giver
199(25)
9 John Maxwell: The Beauty of Gardens
224(26)
10 Priscilla Pointon Gets Married
250(27)
Notes 277(38)
Selected bibliography 315(10)
Index 325
Chris Mounsey is Professor of Eighteenth-Century Literature at the University of Winchester and the author of The Idea of Disability in the Eighteenth Century.