Featherstone Katie, Latimer Joanna, Atkinson Paul, Pilz Daniella T, Clarke Angus
ESRC Centre for Economic and Social Aspects of Genomics, Cardiff University, UK.
Sociol Health Illn. 2005 Jul;27(5):551-74. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2005.00456.x.
Dysmorphology is the medical study of abnormal forms in the human and is concerned with the identification and classification of a variety of congenital malformations. Such diagnostic work rests on the inspection of images of affected individuals. Based on physical appearance individuals are classified in terms of a wide range of conditions, often with 'exotic' nomenclatures. This paper will describe the features of clinical dysmorphology and the process of classification. It derives from an ethnographic study of clinical consultations and meetings among medical geneticists in UK hospitals. We suggest that contemporary dysmorphology can be understood in terms of long-standing forms of medical knowledge, medical representations and medical discourse. Notwithstanding the new forms of technology provided by genetic science, 'the clinic' still asserts its symbolic and functional power: the 'gaze' of the clinician and the clinician's warrant of personal knowledge exert their influence. The adjudication of dysmorphology is a contemporary exemplar of the spectacular.
畸形学是对人类异常形态的医学研究,关注各种先天性畸形的识别和分类。此类诊断工作依赖于对受影响个体图像的检查。基于外貌,个体被归类为多种病症,通常使用 “奇特” 的命名法。本文将描述临床畸形学的特征和分类过程。它源自对英国医院医学遗传学家临床会诊和会议的人种志研究。我们认为,当代畸形学可以根据长期存在的医学知识、医学表征和医学话语形式来理解。尽管基因科学提供了新的技术形式,“临床” 仍然彰显其象征和功能力量:临床医生的 “凝视” 以及临床医生个人知识的依据发挥着影响。畸形学的判定是奇观化的当代典范。