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Chapter 10 - Stethoscopic Fantasies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2023

James Grande
Affiliation:
King's College London
Carmel Raz
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für Empirische Ästhetik

Summary

The invention of the stethoscope by the French physician René Laennec in 1816 was a pivotal moment in the burgeoning field of modern clinical diagnosis. It brought the inner soundscape of the human body – an invisible realm which largely existed beyond the range of the human ear – into not only medical but also more general cultural awareness. This chapter considers the stethoscope as the subject not of ongoing scientific debate and experimentation, but of poetry and fiction, as tales of its use and abuse, as well as its supposed powers, spread among those who first encountered it and sowed a more general sense of confusion, mistrust, and corporeal anxiety in relation to the medical consultation. Drawing on interactions with the stethoscope in works by Wilkie Collins, Bram Stoker, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, and Sheridan Le Fanu, as well as short stories and poetry from popular periodicals, I demonstrate that, as medical institutions accepted new technologies and became increasingly specialized throughout the century, the stethoscope became for many patients an object of anxious contemplation, serving as a palpable interface between doctor and patient, between hope and fear, and between the visible and the invisible.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 10.1 Laennec-type monaural stethoscope, 1851–1900.

Science Museum, London.
Figure 1

Figure 10.2 William Davey, The Illustrated Practical Mesmerist, Curative and Scientific (Edinburgh: William Davey, 1854), plate 2.

Science Museum, London.

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