Materiality, Fragility, and Loss in the Medical Archive
Sources
Tactility and Fragility of Movable Artefacts
“Animated Anatomies.” Duke University Libraries Exhibits, 2011.
Buckley, Cali. “Pathos, Eros, and Curiosity: The History and Reception of Ivory Anatomical Models from the Seventeenth Century to Today.” Nuncius 35/1, 2020: 64-89.
Diehl, Edith. Bookbinding: Its Background and Technique. New York: Rinehart & Company, Inc., 1946.
Weber, Jeff. “A Collector’s Primer to the Wonders of Fore-edge Painting.” The International League of International Books Sellers, 2009.
Witkowski, Gustave Joseph. A Pictorial Manikin, or, Movable Atlas of the Human Body. New York: J. Cristadoro, 1880.
(Im)permanence in Early Medical Photography
Lowry, Bates, and Isabel Barrett Lowry. The Silver Canvas: Daguerreotype Masterpieces from the J. Paul Getty Museum. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1998.
Burns, Stanley B. Early Medical Photography in America: 1839-1883. New York: The Burns Archive, 1983.
“Replica of Morton Inhaler.” The Wood Library-Museum.
Sheenan, Tanya. Doctored: The Medicine of Photography in Nineteenth-Century America. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2011.
Damage, Decay, and Material Loss
“A Neurosurgeon’s Photographic Legacy.” Yale Medicine Magazine, 2008.
“Negative Deterioration Part One: Digitization and Preservation of Cellulose Nitrate and Cellulose Acetate Negatives.” Chicago Albumen Works, 2013.
“Negative Deterioration Part Two: Cellulose Acetate Negative Conservation.” Chicago Albumen Works, 2013.
Ritzenthaler, Mary Lynn. Preserving Archives and Manuscripts. Chicago: The Society of American Archivists, 1993.
"The Deterioration and Preservation of Paper: Some Essential Facts." Library of Congress: Preservation.
The Image Permanence Institute.
Conservation in Process, Parts 1 & 2