BIBLIOGRAPHY | RESOURCES | FURTHER READING

ALBERTI, S. J. (2005). Objects and the Museum. Isis. 96, 559-571.

ALLOTEY JC. (2011). English midwives' responses to the medicalisation of childbirth (1671-1795). Midwifery. 27, 532-8.

ANDERSEN, L. (2012) Exhibiting Human Remains in the Museum: A Discussion of Ethics and Museum Practise. [online] Available at: http://programs.columbian.gwu.edu/museumstudies/sites/default/files/u6/Exhibiting_Human_Remains.pdf [Accessed: 24 june 2012].

BARILAN, Y. (2005). The story of the body and the story of the person: Towards an ethics of representing human bodies and body-parts. Medicine, Health Care & Philosophy. 8, 193-205.

BLACK, Professor Sue, S.M.Black@dundee.ac.uk (2012) Doll mandible and amira data. [email] Message to Lenk, S. (s.lenk@dundee.ac.uk). Sent Wednesday 20 June, 2012.

BLACKWELL, B. (2001). "Tristram Shandy" and the Theater of the Mechanical Mother. ELH. 68, 81-133

BOSCHUNG, U. (1981) Geburtshilfliche Lehrmodelle. Notizen zur Geschichte des Phantoms und der Hysteroplasmata. Gesnerus, 38 (00), p.59-68.

CENTRE FOR ACADEMIC RESEARCH AND TRAINING IN ANTHROPOGENY (CARTA) (n.d.) Age of Closure of Fontanelles / Sutures. [online] Available at: http://carta.anthropogeny.org/moca/topics/age-closure-fontanelles-sutures [Accessed: 28 July, 2012].

COLE, C. (1993). Sex and Death on Display: Women, Reproduction, and Fetuses at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry. TDR. 37, 43-60.

CUNNINGHAM, C., c.a.cunningham@dundee.ac.uk (2012) dentition in neo-natal skull scan data. [email] Message to Lenk, S. (s.lenk@dundee.ac.uk). Sent 23 July, 2012.

DAVIS-FLOYD, R. E. (1987). The Technological Model of Birth. Journal of American Folklore. 100, 479-495.

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DOUGLAS, William. (1748) "A Letter to Dr. Smelle shewing the impropriety of his New-invented wooden forceps…," pamphlet, J. Roberts, London,

DRIFE J. (2002). The start of life: a history of obstetrics. Postgraduate Medical Journal. 78, 311-5.

DUCE, S.., S.Duce@dundee.ac.uk (2012) the inner contents of the obstetric dolls. [email] Message to Lenk, S. (s.lenk@dundee.ac.uk). Sent 20 june, 2012.

DUNDES L. (1987). The evolution of maternal birthing position. American Journal of Public Health. 77, 636-41.

DUNN, P. (n.d.). The Chamberlen family (1560-1728) and obstetric forceps. BMJ Group. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1721004.

GARDNER, R. (2007). Simulation and simulator technology in obstetrics: past, present and future.EXPERT REVIEW OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY. 2, 775-790.

GIEBELHAUSEN, MICHAELA. (2006). Lost worlds: how the museum remembers. University of Hertfordshire. http://sitem.herts.ac.uk/artdes_research/papers/wpades/vol4/mgfull.html.

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HANRETTY, K. P. (2010). Obstetrics illustrated. Edinburgh, Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier.

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JEFFRIES, P. R., BAMBINI, D., HENSEL, D., MOORMAN, M., & WASHBURN, J. (2009). IN FOCUS: Constructing Maternal-Child Learning Experiences Using Clinical Simulations. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal Nursing. 38, 613-623.

JEWSON, N. D. (1974). Medical Knowledge and the Patronage System in 18th Century England. Sociology. 8, 369-385.

JONES, K., kristinajonesmd@gmail.com (2012) corrections to website | regarding fontanelles. [email] Message to Lenk, S. (steflenk@gmail.com). Sent 31, July, 2012.

KAPIT, W., & ELSON, L. M. (2002). The anatomy coloring book. San Francisco, Benjamin Cummings.

KING, H. (2007). Midwifery, obstetrics and the rise of gynaecology: the uses of a sixteenth-century compendium. Aldershot, Hants, Ashgate Pub.

KLUKOFF, P. J. (1970). Smollett's defence of Dr. Smellie in The Critical Review. Medical History.

LOUDON I. (1986). Obstetric care, social class, and maternal mortality. British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.). 293, 606-8.

LOUDON I. (1990). Obstetrics and the general practitioner. BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.). 301, 703-7.

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MURI A. (2010). Imagining reproduction: The politics of reproduction, technology and the woman machine.Journal of Medical Humanities. 31, 53-67. Musées en Haute- Normandie (2012) Madame du Coudray's 'Machine'. [online] Available at: http://www.musees-haute-normandie.fr/objet.php3?lang=en&idrub=72 [Accessed: july 27, 2012].

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O'DOWD, M. J., & PHILIPP, E. E. (1994). The history of obstetrics and gynaecology. New York, Parthenon Pub. Group.

OKUDA Y., BRYSON E.O., DEMARIA JR. S., JACOBSON L., SHEN B., LEVINE A.I., & QUINONES J. (2009). The utility of simulation in medical education: What is the evidence? Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine.76, 330-343.

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RHODES, P. (1994). Short history of clinical midwifery. [S.l.], Butterworth-Heinemann.

ROBERTS AD, BASKETT TF, CALDER AA, & ARULKUMARAN S. (2010). William Smellie and William Hunter: two great obstetricians and anatomists. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 103, 205-6.

ROHEN, J. W., YOKOCHI, C., & LÜTJEN-DRECOLL, E. (2011). Color atlas of anatomy: a photographic study of the human body. Philadelphia, Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

SMELLIE, W. (1753) A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Midwifery. London: D. Wilson.

SMELLIE, W. (1792). A set of anatomical tables: with explanations, and an abridgment of the practice of midwifery : with a view to illustrate a treatise on that subject, and collection of cases. Edinburgh, Printed for William Creech.

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Unknown. (2005) Department for Culture, Media and Sport: Guidance for the Care of Human Remains in Museums. [online] Available at: http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.culture.gov.uk/images/publications/GuidanceHumanRemains11Oct.pdf [Accessed: 24 june 2012].

WALTER, T. (2008). To see for myself: informed consent and the culture of openness. Journal of Medical Ethics.34, 675-678.

WITCOMB, A. (2003). Re-imagining the museum: beyond the mausoleum. London, Routledge. ~(BOOK)

WOODS, R. (2008). Texts and Documents - Dr Smellie's Prescriptions for Pregnant Women. Medical History. 52, 257.

COLLECTIONS

Anatomical Specimens Collection, Dundee, Scotland, School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee

The RCPE Collection, Edinburgh, Scotland, Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

SCHEUER, L , (ongoing) [neo-natal osteological remains] (specimen boxes: SC21, SC180, SC223), Scheuer Collection, Dundee, Scotland, School of Life Sciences