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History of anatomical engagement

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Forthcoming

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History of anatomical engagement. / Taylor, Adam; Wessels, Quenton.
In: Anatomical Sciences Education, 16.01.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Taylor, A & Wessels, Q 2025, 'History of anatomical engagement', Anatomical Sciences Education.

APA

Taylor, A., & Wessels, Q. (in press). History of anatomical engagement. Anatomical Sciences Education.

Vancouver

Taylor A, Wessels Q. History of anatomical engagement. Anatomical Sciences Education. 2025 Jan 16.

Author

Taylor, Adam ; Wessels, Quenton. / History of anatomical engagement. In: Anatomical Sciences Education. 2025.

Bibtex

@article{45e4a9e451384d6997c758867eb7a939,
title = "History of anatomical engagement",
abstract = "The public{\textquoteright}s fascination with anatomy has evolved over time and progressed from avoidance of the tainted yet saintly corpse, to their fascination with cabinets of curiosities. The current narrative review explores public engagement (PE), from its potential origins as cave paintings, to the rise of the disciplinarity of anatomy. Historical insights show how the public engaged in anatomy and with anatomy evolved alongside educational trends and advances ethics. Teaching modalities have shifted as resources have fallen out of favor, become unappealing, illegal or logistically challenging to deliver.Historical changes have resulted in newer approaches coming into the limelight, often moving from the anatomy classroom into the public eye. The public{\textquoteright}s curiosity with anatomy was satisfied through the organized violence of vivisections and dissections, cabinets of curiosity and permanent museums.Today, the driver of PE is research, education and motivation for learning in the hope of improving people{\textquoteright}s understanding of their bodies. PE has shifted from spectacles to active participation and collaboration. Looking forward, the authors also propose an adaptive interdisciplinary model for PE in anatomy.",
author = "Adam Taylor and Quenton Wessels",
year = "2025",
month = jan,
day = "16",
language = "English",
journal = "Anatomical Sciences Education",
issn = "1935-9772",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - History of anatomical engagement

AU - Taylor, Adam

AU - Wessels, Quenton

PY - 2025/1/16

Y1 - 2025/1/16

N2 - The public’s fascination with anatomy has evolved over time and progressed from avoidance of the tainted yet saintly corpse, to their fascination with cabinets of curiosities. The current narrative review explores public engagement (PE), from its potential origins as cave paintings, to the rise of the disciplinarity of anatomy. Historical insights show how the public engaged in anatomy and with anatomy evolved alongside educational trends and advances ethics. Teaching modalities have shifted as resources have fallen out of favor, become unappealing, illegal or logistically challenging to deliver.Historical changes have resulted in newer approaches coming into the limelight, often moving from the anatomy classroom into the public eye. The public’s curiosity with anatomy was satisfied through the organized violence of vivisections and dissections, cabinets of curiosity and permanent museums.Today, the driver of PE is research, education and motivation for learning in the hope of improving people’s understanding of their bodies. PE has shifted from spectacles to active participation and collaboration. Looking forward, the authors also propose an adaptive interdisciplinary model for PE in anatomy.

AB - The public’s fascination with anatomy has evolved over time and progressed from avoidance of the tainted yet saintly corpse, to their fascination with cabinets of curiosities. The current narrative review explores public engagement (PE), from its potential origins as cave paintings, to the rise of the disciplinarity of anatomy. Historical insights show how the public engaged in anatomy and with anatomy evolved alongside educational trends and advances ethics. Teaching modalities have shifted as resources have fallen out of favor, become unappealing, illegal or logistically challenging to deliver.Historical changes have resulted in newer approaches coming into the limelight, often moving from the anatomy classroom into the public eye. The public’s curiosity with anatomy was satisfied through the organized violence of vivisections and dissections, cabinets of curiosity and permanent museums.Today, the driver of PE is research, education and motivation for learning in the hope of improving people’s understanding of their bodies. PE has shifted from spectacles to active participation and collaboration. Looking forward, the authors also propose an adaptive interdisciplinary model for PE in anatomy.

M3 - Journal article

JO - Anatomical Sciences Education

JF - Anatomical Sciences Education

SN - 1935-9772

ER -