Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph

The interest harboured by the Visual Culture of Medicine in photographic images of hermaphrodites dates back in Portugal to the birth of medical photography, with the photographic recording of a case of male hermaphroditism, that was studied in 1864 by Carlos Miguel Augusto May Figueira (1829-1913)...

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Main Author: António Fernando Cascais
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS) 2017-12-01
Series:Comunicação e Sociedade
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1083
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spelling doaj-85a2167aca1e42d2b2d878b95a9a19c02020-11-25T03:21:30ZengCentro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS)Comunicação e Sociedade1645-20892183-35752017-12-01328110010.17231/comsoc.32(2017).27521083Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photographAntónio Fernando Cascais0Universidade Nova de LisboaThe interest harboured by the Visual Culture of Medicine in photographic images of hermaphrodites dates back in Portugal to the birth of medical photography, with the photographic recording of a case of male hermaphroditism, that was studied in 1864 by Carlos Miguel Augusto May Figueira (1829-1913) at the Medical Clinic Service of the S. José Hospital, only four years after the publication of the seminal work on this topic by Félix Nadar. This 1864 study is one of the founding elements of a Portuguese scientia sexualis in the wider context of modern sexology, as described by Michel Foucault, that evolved in Portugal between the mid-19th century and the 1930s-1940s. The thematic lineage of research into hermaphroditism and intersexuality, initiated by May Figueira was subsequently pursued by Portuguese clinicians and medical scientists from the first decade of the 20th century up until the 1940s. The ultimate goal of the medical photographic recording of hermaphrodites was to pave the way to surgical correction, in strict compliance with binary sexual dimorphism that the original diagnosis never dared to question.https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1083Hermaphroditismintersexualitymedicinephotographygender
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author António Fernando Cascais
spellingShingle António Fernando Cascais
Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
Comunicação e Sociedade
Hermaphroditism
intersexuality
medicine
photography
gender
author_facet António Fernando Cascais
author_sort António Fernando Cascais
title Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
title_short Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
title_full Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
title_fullStr Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
title_full_unstemmed Hermaphroditism and intersexuality in Portuguese medical photograph
title_sort hermaphroditism and intersexuality in portuguese medical photograph
publisher Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS)
series Comunicação e Sociedade
issn 1645-2089
2183-3575
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The interest harboured by the Visual Culture of Medicine in photographic images of hermaphrodites dates back in Portugal to the birth of medical photography, with the photographic recording of a case of male hermaphroditism, that was studied in 1864 by Carlos Miguel Augusto May Figueira (1829-1913) at the Medical Clinic Service of the S. José Hospital, only four years after the publication of the seminal work on this topic by Félix Nadar. This 1864 study is one of the founding elements of a Portuguese scientia sexualis in the wider context of modern sexology, as described by Michel Foucault, that evolved in Portugal between the mid-19th century and the 1930s-1940s. The thematic lineage of research into hermaphroditism and intersexuality, initiated by May Figueira was subsequently pursued by Portuguese clinicians and medical scientists from the first decade of the 20th century up until the 1940s. The ultimate goal of the medical photographic recording of hermaphrodites was to pave the way to surgical correction, in strict compliance with binary sexual dimorphism that the original diagnosis never dared to question.
topic Hermaphroditism
intersexuality
medicine
photography
gender
url https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1083
work_keys_str_mv AT antoniofernandocascais hermaphroditismandintersexualityinportuguesemedicalphotograph
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