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6 - The ‘New World of Surgery’

Sepsis, Sentiment, and Scientific Modernity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2022

Michael Brown
Affiliation:
Lancaster University

Summary

This chapter charts the ultimate triumph of the emotional regime of scientific modernity in the form of antisepsis, Joseph Lister’s application of germ theory to surgical practice. It begins by exploring the ways in which antisepsis eliminated the patient as an emotional agent in surgery. The 1860s saw profound concern within surgery about the devastating impact of sepsis on post-operative mortality. Many of the explanations provided for this phenomenon rested on long-standing ideas about the role of the patient’s constitution and emotional state in regulating their post-operative health. However, by focusing purely on the condition of the wound, and the need to keep it free of ‘germs’, Lister’s antisepsis effectively overwrote these explanations, rendering patient subjectivity largely meaningless. At the same time, however, if emotions no longer possessed any ontological significance in surgery, the second part of this chapter demonstrates that they nonetheless played a powerful rhetorical function, as this ‘new world of surgery’ was configured in highly sentimentalised terms. This sentimentality not only served to counter widespread popular anxieties about surgery’s moral character, but also constructed Lister, the ultimate scientific surgeon and the emotional template for surgical modernity, as a quasi-divine saviour.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 6.1 ‘The Doll Episode’ from J. R. Leeson, Lister as I Knew Him (1927).

Author’s photograph.
Figure 1

Figure 6.2 Luke Fildes, The Doctor (1891). Item No. N01522.

Tate.

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