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Swallow
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In this fascinating and lyrical book, the seemingly disparate but equally marvelous worlds of the circus and the medical amphitheater meet in characters ranging from the sword swallowers and women ...
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01 May 2012

In this fascinating and lyrical book, the seemingly disparate but equally marvelous worlds of the circus and the medical amphitheater meet in characters ranging from the sword swallowers and women who lunched on hardware to the sensitive, bullied boy who grew up to be the father of endoscopy. The Mütter Museum's Chevalier Jackson Foreign Body Collection, a cabinet filled with thousands of items that have been swallowed or inhaled, then extracted nonsurgically by a pioneering laryngologist using rigid instruments of his own design, sets the stage for award-winning author Mary Cappello's moving investigative portrait of Dr. Chevalier Jackson (1865-1958), his cosmology of objects, and the lives he saved. Its own uncanny, deeply rewarding assemblage, Swallow brings together the complex physiology of the human swallow and the menace of a button box; a willed ingestion of non-nutritive things that is little understood and a social history of hunger; the humanitarian mission that bred the Federal Caustic Poison Act of 1927 and a crusade to make the world “foreign body conscious.”
Price: $18.95
Pages: 304
Publisher: The New Press
Imprint: The New Press
Publication Date:
01 May 2012
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781595587770
Format: Paperback
“A warm and thoroughly researched portrait.”
—The Washington Post
“Cappello … brings a psychoanalytic richness to her understanding of ingestion and dentition.”
—The Guardian
“[Cappello] packs her story with surprising imagery and extravagant lyricism, taking a highly literary approach on the subject.”
—Salon
“One odd, and oddly haunting, book.”
—Macleans
"Swallow is a surprising and original work. It is biography on the slant, a meditation that transcends boundaries and genres, written with scholarship, humor, and panache. I urge you to take this journey."
—Ricky Jay
"[Cappello's] writing style is wistful, wacky, and wise. . . . Swallow is a strange and alluring work of musings and medical history. . . . Occupying a curious position between Ripley's Believe It or Not and riveting biography, this book is something special."
—Tony Miksanek, MD, JAMA
"A wonderful and bizarre book: gorge yourself on it, and gulp."
—Simon Winchester, author of Atlantic
"Cappello's fine writing creates a book that goes down very easy."
—Paul Di Filippo, The Barnes & Noble Review
—The Washington Post
“Cappello … brings a psychoanalytic richness to her understanding of ingestion and dentition.”
—The Guardian
“[Cappello] packs her story with surprising imagery and extravagant lyricism, taking a highly literary approach on the subject.”
—Salon
“One odd, and oddly haunting, book.”
—Macleans
"Swallow is a surprising and original work. It is biography on the slant, a meditation that transcends boundaries and genres, written with scholarship, humor, and panache. I urge you to take this journey."
—Ricky Jay
"[Cappello's] writing style is wistful, wacky, and wise. . . . Swallow is a strange and alluring work of musings and medical history. . . . Occupying a curious position between Ripley's Believe It or Not and riveting biography, this book is something special."
—Tony Miksanek, MD, JAMA
"A wonderful and bizarre book: gorge yourself on it, and gulp."
—Simon Winchester, author of Atlantic
"Cappello's fine writing creates a book that goes down very easy."
—Paul Di Filippo, The Barnes & Noble Review
Mary Cappello is the author of Awkward (a Los Angeles Times bestseller), Called Back, and Night Bloom. A recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship, the Bechtel Prize for Educating the Imagination, and the Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize, she teaches at the University of Rhode Island and lives in Providence.
Author's Note
I. Who Was That Man?
“Alone on Floor with Pile of Buttons”
Remembering Forward: The Idea of a Legacy
Fbdy #C804, Case #3268, X-rays #48451C and 48460C: The Case of Andrew C.
A Peculiar Chap
“The Life of Chevalier Jackson”: Early Prototypes of Rescue
II. How Does Someone Swallow That?
Between Carelessness and Desire: Getting Objects Down
Chevalier Jackson's Traumatic “Phases”
A Catastrophe of Childhood: Gastric Lavage
Chevalier Jackson's Tears: The Case of the Boy Who Cried
Fbdy (Multiple) #1173: Gavage: The Case of Joseph B.
Fbdy #2440: A Perfect Attendance Pin
“Strange Things Were on the Run from Mary's Deepest Depths”: Hardware, Swords, Scopes
III. What Are These Things?
Fbdy #565: The Case of Margaret Derryberry: Objects Lost and Found and Lost Again
Instrumentality and Instruments as Things
Modernist Portals and Secular Tabernacles: Chevalier Jackson Meets Joseph Cornell
IV. Mystery Bones and the Unrecovered Boy
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
I. Who Was That Man?
“Alone on Floor with Pile of Buttons”
Remembering Forward: The Idea of a Legacy
Fbdy #C804, Case #3268, X-rays #48451C and 48460C: The Case of Andrew C.
A Peculiar Chap
“The Life of Chevalier Jackson”: Early Prototypes of Rescue
II. How Does Someone Swallow That?
Between Carelessness and Desire: Getting Objects Down
Chevalier Jackson's Traumatic “Phases”
A Catastrophe of Childhood: Gastric Lavage
Chevalier Jackson's Tears: The Case of the Boy Who Cried
Fbdy (Multiple) #1173: Gavage: The Case of Joseph B.
Fbdy #2440: A Perfect Attendance Pin
“Strange Things Were on the Run from Mary's Deepest Depths”: Hardware, Swords, Scopes
III. What Are These Things?
Fbdy #565: The Case of Margaret Derryberry: Objects Lost and Found and Lost Again
Instrumentality and Instruments as Things
Modernist Portals and Secular Tabernacles: Chevalier Jackson Meets Joseph Cornell
IV. Mystery Bones and the Unrecovered Boy
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index