Reviews
Drawing on critical cartography, postcolonial science and technology studies, and the author's keen eye for interpreting images, Lan Li's Body Maps completely redraws the history of Chinese acupuncture 'meridians.' Full of engaging narratives, copious illustrations, and penetrating insights, this book is a tour de force and a must-read for all historians of modern science and medicine.
In Body Maps, Lan A. Li expertly dissects a dazzling array of anatomical images and writings as they passed through the hands and minds of physicians, scientists, philosophers, and artists who held sometimes radically divergent ideas about how the body was assembled. In tracing the passage, Li has produced a modern masterpiece that will forever change how we think about the history of the body and how we write about seemingly transparent historical images that are actually anything but.
Book Details
Preface
Introduction
1. Representing Meridians and the Mind
2. Early Modern Metaphors as Translation
3. The Limits of Anatomy through Tu
4. Generic Maps and the Failure of Standardization
5. Modern
Preface
Introduction
1. Representing Meridians and the Mind
2. Early Modern Metaphors as Translation
3. The Limits of Anatomy through Tu
4. Generic Maps and the Failure of Standardization
5. Modern Mediations in Difference and Diplomacy
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Glossary A. Key Concepts
Glossary B. Other Sinographic Terms
Notes
Bibliography
Index