Anatomy Academy

Anatomy Academy
Author: Katie Collins
Publisher: PRUFROCK PRESS INC.
Total Pages: 68
Release: 2005
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781593630515

Educational title for gifted and advanced learners.

Anatomy Academy

Anatomy Academy
Author: Tommy Cutter
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2000-11-20
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0595151884

Welcome to medical school. Its a place where students would kill to attend. But something is killing the students. Meet Vera, the lifeless corpse who is quite possibly upset with the way the anatomy students are cutting into her. Push your mind beyond the limits of reality as the mystery of murder unfolds in this spine-tingling, cult classic.

Early Career Teachers in Higher Education

Early Career Teachers in Higher Education
Author: Jody Crutchley
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2021-08-12
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1350129356

Early Career Teachers in Higher Education explores the experiences of Early Career Teachers (ECTs) through 13 personal teaching journeys from academics working across Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe and South America. This edited volume contains the subjective narrative of each contributor's entry into academia, their pedagogic practice and the development of their multiple teaching identities. Their personal narratives and testimonies presented here will provide a valuable resource for ECTs and academics around the world as they begin teaching in higher education. In addition, this edited book highlights contemporary issues, such as precarity, casualisation, fragmentation of academic responsibilities and intersectionality, that shape contemporary ECT workloads.

Sudden Death: Medicine and Religion in Eighteenth-Century Rome

Sudden Death: Medicine and Religion in Eighteenth-Century Rome
Author: Maria Pia Donato
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2016-04-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1317048520

In 1705-1706, during the War of the Spanish Succession and two years after a devastating earthquake, an ’epidemic’ of mysterious sudden deaths terrorized Rome. In early modern society, a sudden death was perceived as a mala mors because it threatened the victim’s salvation by hindering repentance and last confession. Special masses were celebrated to implore God’s clemency and Pope Clement XI ordered his personal physician, Giovanni Maria Lancisi, to perform a series of dissections in the university anatomical theatre in order to discover the 'true causes' of the deadly events. It was the first investigation of this kind ever to take place for a condition which was not contagious. The book that Lancisi published on this topic, De subitaneis mortibus (’On Sudden Deaths’, 1707), is one of the earliest modern scientific investigations of death; it was not only an accomplished example of mechanical philosophy as applied to the life sciences in eighteenth-century Europe, but also heralded a new pathological anatomy (traditionally associated with Giambattista Morgagni). Moreover, Lancisi’s tract and the whole affair of the sudden deaths in Rome marked a significant break in the traditional attitude towards dying, introducing a more active approach that would later develop into the practice of resuscitation medicine. Sudden Death explores how a new scientific interpretation of death and a new attitude towards dying first came into being, breaking free from the Hippocratic tradition, which regarded death as the obvious limit of physician’s capacity, and leading the way to a belief in the 'conquest of death' by medicine which remains in force to this day.

Death, Dissection and the Destitute

Death, Dissection and the Destitute
Author: Ruth Richardson
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 472
Release: 2000
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0226712400

In the early nineteenth century, body snatching was rife because the only corpses available for medical study were those of hanged murderers. With the Anatomy Act of 1832, however, the bodies of those who died destitute in workhouses were appropriated for dissection. At a time when such a procedure was regarded with fear and revulsion, the Anatomy Act effectively rendered dissection a punishment for poverty. Providing both historical and contemporary insights, Death, Dissection, and the Destitute opens rich new prospects in history and history of science. The new afterword draws important parallels between social and medical history and contemporary concerns regarding organs for transplant and human tissue for research.