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The
Knife Man
The
Knife Man When Robert Louis Stevenson wrote his gothic horror
story of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, he reputedly based the house
of the genial doctor turned fiend on the home of the 18th century
surgeon and anatomist John Hunter. The choice was understandable,
for Hunter combined an altruistic determination to advance scientific
knowledge with dark dealings that brought him into daily contact
with the sinister Georgian underworld. In 18th century London,
Hunter was a man both acclaimed and feared. Despite humble beginnings
and poor academic prowess, John Hunter was to become the best-known
anatomist of his day. At a time when operations were crude,
painful and often fatal, Hunter revolutionized surgical practice
through his groundbreaking scientific experiments. Rejecting
Classical doctrines and medieval superstitions, he grounded
surgery in experimental research and factual evidence. Driven
by an insatiable curiosity, Hunter dissected thousands of human
bodies, using the knowledge he gained to improve medical care
for countless patients. Treating not only the poor but also
some of the most illustrious characters of the time, such as
Joshua Reynolds and the young Lord Byron, he was appointed Surgeon
Extraordinary to King George III and served in the Seven Years
War where, following long, bloody battles, he patched up the
unfortunate casualties' musket wounds and bayonet injuries.
Considered by many to be the father of modern surgery, Hunter
was also an eminent naturalist; he dissected the first creatures
brought back from Captain Cook's voyages to Australia and kept
exotic animals in his country menagerie in Earls Court; his
eventual thesis outlining his ideas on evolution included a
passage headed, 'On the origin of species'. Written some 60
years before Darwin's famous paper, this potentially groundbreaking
work was suppressed on religious grounds by the Royal Society.
Ultimately, he created the largest anatomical collection of
its kind - which has been called 'a museum of evolution' - still
to be seen in central London. Although a leading figure of the
Enlightenment, and friend to many influential men of his age,
including Sir Joseph Banks, Benjamin Franklin and James Watt,
Hunter's tireless quest for human and animal bodies drove him
to unparalleled extremes that immersed in the murky world of
body-snatching. He paid large sums to his criminal contacts
for the stolen corpses of men, women and children which were
delivered in hampers to his back door. In The Knife Man Wendy
Moore unveils John Hunter's extraordinary world - a world characterized
by hangings at the Tyburn Tree, by gruesome expeditions to dank
churchyards, and by countless human dissections in attic rooms.
Meticulously researched, vividly drawn, this is also a fascinating
portrait of a remarkable pioneer in the emergent sciences of
geology, biology and evolution and his determined struggle to
haul surgery out of the realm of superstition and into the dawn
of modern medicine.
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