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Book cover of Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul Race and Psychology in the Shaping of Aesthetic Surgery
Medical Sociology, Women's Health, Reproductive & Body Issues, Surgery

Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul Race and Psychology in the Shaping of Aesthetic Surgery

by Sander L. Gilman
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Overview

Why do physicians who’ve taken the Hippocratic Oath willingly cut into seemingly healthy patients? How do you measure the success of surgery aimed at making someone happier by altering his or her body? Sander L. Gilman explores such questions in Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul, a cultural history of the connections between beauty of body and happiness of mind. Following these themes through an impressive range of historical moments and players, Gilman traces how aesthetic alterations of the body have been used to “cure” dissatisfied states of mind.
In his exploration of the striking parallels between the development of cosmetic surgery and the field of psychiatry, Gilman entertains an array of philosophical and psychological questions that underlie the more practical decisions rountinely made by doctors and potential patients considering these types of surgery. While surveying and incorporating the relevant theories of Sigmund Freud, Alfred Adler, Karl Menninger, Paul Schilder, contemporary feminist critics, and others, Gilman considers the highly unstable nature of cultural notions of health, happiness, and beauty. He reveals how ideas of race and gender structured early understandings of aesthetic surgery in discussions of both the “abnormality” of the Jewish nose and the historical requirement that healthy and virtuous females look “normal,” thereby enabling them to achieve invisibility. Reflecting upon historically widespread prejudices, Gilman describes the persecutions, harrassment, attacks, and even murders that continue to result from bodily difference and he encourages readers to question the cultural assumptions that underlie the increasing acceptability of this surgical form of psychotherapy.
Synthesizing a vast body of related literature and containing a comprehensive bibliography, Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul will appeal to a broad audience, including those interested in the histories of medicine and psychiatry, and in philosophy, cultural studies, Jewish cultural studies, and race and ethnicity.

About the Author, Sander L. Gilman

Sander L. Gilman is Henry R. Luce Professor of the Liberal Arts in Human Biology, Professor and Chair of the Department of Germanic Studies, and Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago. He is the author or editor of over fifty books, including Freud, Race, and Gender; The Jew’s Body; and Disease and Representation: Images of Illness from Madness to AIDS.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul reveals the multi-dimensional cultural, political, and ‘racial’ aspects of the development of modern aesthetic surgery. With his usual acuity, aplomb, and elan, Sander Gilman shows that the distinction between ‘reconstructive’ and ‘aesthetic’ plastic surgery is a thoroughly cultural, thoroughly constructed, and thus thoroughly political/racialized difference.”—Daniel Boyarin, author of Unheroic Conduct: The Rise of Heterosexuality and theInvention of the Jewish Man

“Erudite and wide-ranging, Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul will stimulate a great deal of discussion. A welcomed addition to Gilman’s already impressive ouevre.”—Dr. George Makari, Cornell University Medical College

“Sander Gilman’s undisputed mastery in explaining and analyzing human stereotypes receives a new and fascinating dimension through the role which aesthetic surgery plays in connecting ideas of physical change and human happiness.”—George L. Mosse, author of The Image of Man and The Crisis of German Ideology

Journal of the American Medical Association

This book raises many interesting ideas that could explain the current rage for cosmetic surgery. The book is complex, and this brief review cannot discuss all the issues addressed. The focus on the nose and psychoanalysis is unique, as far as I am aware. Those interested in the phenomenon of cosmetic surgery will want to read this book.

Publishers Weekly

Arguing that pseudoscientific theories of race from the 19th and early 20th centuries still impact our current standards of beauty and 'unhappiness' with our own bodies, prolific critic Gilman explores plastic surgery as an extension of psychotherapy. He traces the history of aesthetic surgery from its initial function of hiding disease (most particularly syphilis) to is later incarnation as a means of erasing ethnic identity (specifically Jewish identifications by nose shape and size) and creating a more 'normal' appearance.

Times Literary Supplement

The development of aesthetic surgery required not only the discovery of anesthesia and antisepsis but also the emergence in society of a common perception of what constituted acceptable appearance. In Creating Beauty to Cure the Soul, Gilman shows how such ideas emerged during the Enlightenment with, among others, Kant and Karl Rosenkrantz, who saw the body in affective and then moral terms; what looked beautiful was pleasing and was a sign of virtue, health, and happiness. Certain visible differences-'ugliness'-were then categorized as unhealthy and stigmatized. If the 'ugly' were either ill, or predisposed to become ill, and destined to pass on these characteristics to their offspring, then no amount of surgery or cosmetics could alter this. . . . [Gilman] deserves great credit for uncovering the relationship between the complex and occasionally contradictory ideas of psychoanalysis and the more prosaic world of surgery, showing how psychoanalysis influenced and under pinned theories on the efficacy of aesthetic surgery.

Psychoanalytic Books

As a psychoanalytically informed and sophisticated cultural historian, Gilman critiques not only the profession of aesthetic surgery but also those persons who subject themselves to surgical intervention in order to overcome what must be seen as a psychological problem. He critically explores the ethical issues involved in surgically operating on a 'healthy' body to fit the patient's desire or wishes, an the rationalizations offered by cosmetic surgeons to justify their 'specialization. . . . ' [T]he book is an enjoyable venture into cultural history, well written and thus worthwhile. . .

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1998
Publisher
Duke University Press
Pages
192
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780822321118

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