Coyer Megan J.
The periodical press in the early nineteenth century was a site of dynamic exchange between men of science and men of letters, and was a particularly rich site of expression for medical ideas. This chapter explores the symbiotic relationship between the Blackwoodian prose fiction and the scientific and medical investigations of the Glaswegian surgeon and writer, Robert Macnish (1802–37), and in particular, his explorations of altered states of consciousness and phrenology. It is argued that his prose tales reveal the Blackwoodian ‘tale of terror’ to be an experimental template for the medical theorist and budding phrenologist, revealing problematic sites for medical hermeneutics in early nineteenth-century Scotland.
19世纪早期的期刊出版社是科学家和文人进行活跃交流的场所,也是医学思想表达的一个特别丰富的场所。本章探讨了布莱克伍德式散文小说与格拉斯哥外科医生兼作家罗伯特·麦克尼什(1802 - 1837)的科学及医学研究之间的共生关系,尤其探讨了他对意识改变状态和颅相学的探索。有人认为,他的散文故事表明布莱克伍德式的“恐怖故事”是医学理论家及初露头角的颅相学家的实验模板,揭示了19世纪早期苏格兰医学诠释学中存在问题的领域。