HALLOWEEN & PATHOLOGY WEEK EVENTS @ THE OLD OPERATING THEATRE!

 

HORRIBLE HALLOWEEN

HALF TERM
AT
THE OLD OPERATING THEATRE MUSEUM!

 

 

Monday 25th, Wednesday 27th and Friday 29th October at 2pm


THE PRESSURE of the KNIFE


The amputation was one of the great capital operations a 19th century surgeon might be called upon to perform. However it was not the only one...
From cutting for the stone and eye surgery to trephining and rhinoplasty,
a talk about the many operations of the early 19th century, the skilled surgeons who performed them, the brave patients who endured them and the eager students who watched them.

 

Tuesday 26th and Thursday 28th October at 12pm


BARBERS, BLOOD & BANDAGES


An interactive workshop for children exploring 18th and 19th century medicine! What did people do before the invention of anaesthetic and antiseptic procedures?
Everyone is familiar with the red and white stripes outside of barber’s shops... but do you know what the rotating pole means?

 

Tuesday 26th October at 2pm

 

THE MANDRAKE: "Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake's groan"

                                       (King Henry VI- William Shakespeare)

A talk on the magical and mythical plant that has enchanted generations of writers and artists thoughout time. A journey through the use of Mandrake in medicine, folklore and literature, from Shakespeare to Burroughs , from Doctors to Witches.
Join us for a fascinating exploration into the history of the so-called Satan's Apple.

 

 

Tuesday 26th October 7-8pm

admission £ 3

WHOSE BLOOD:  A PLAY IN DEVELOPMENT

Come along and be part of a play in the making! Visit the historic Old Operating Theatre and see a staged reading of a new play specifically being written and developed to be performed there in early 2011. The play, Whose Blood, is the story of two Ghanaian immigrants who come to London in the 1840s, and when one of them falls sick, they come to St Thomas' Hospital where an assistant surgeon proposes a radical new solution.  Whose Blood is a play of shifting desires and allegiances, all played out in a 19th Century Operating theatre."

 


Thursday 28th October at 2pm (over 15 only)


'ONE NIGHT WITH VENUS, A LIFETIME WITH MERCURY...'


19th Century literature and medical approaches to the disease of love and lust: syphilis.
A talk introducing the impact of syphilis in literary and medical culture, exploring
the different treatments available in hospitals, and the metaphorical influence the disease had on
European writing and poetry.

 

Saturday 30th October at 2pm


BREAK YOUR LEG AND DIE?


“A patient preparing for an operation was like a condemned criminal preparing for execution.”
A demonstration of an operation without anaesthetics or antiseptics, in Britain’s only
remaining wooden 19th century Operating Theatre.
How will you survive...?

 

Halloween; Sunday 31st October at 2pm (over 12s only)


BODY SNATCHER

Thoughout the 18th and early 19th century, surgeons and their students sought increased access to anatomy. But with legal supplies of corpses limited, where could they get their subjects from?...
A talk on the history of the professional resurrectionists, the men who supplied the dissecting rooms of London from the graves of the city, the tricks of the their trade and the stories of their gruesome work.

 


Booking is strongly advised. Call 0207 188 2679

 

or email curator@thegarret.org.uk to reserve a place

 

 

NOVEMBER EVENTS !

 

 

November Thu 4th 6.30- 8pm £6 NATIONAL PATHOLOGY WEEK

AUTOPSY

The Final Operation

As well as operating on the living, doctors have always examined the dead to find out more about how the body works and what can go wrong. This is your chance to find out what an autopsy involves and how it has changed over the centuries. You can meet a real pathologist and even handle some of the instruments they use. Join us to find out what doctors can learn from the dead – and how this can help the living.

 

feedback from the public:

"This was an excellent event – very interesting and enjoyable.

I loved how interactive it was.

Thank you for an amazing time"

 

This event is part of National Pathology Week, which is organised by the Royal College of Pathologists and sponsored by Siemens.

www.nationalpathologyweek.org

 

 

Wednesday 10t November at 6.30pm

 

DEALING WITH THE DEAD

Sentiment Versus Efficiency

 

A talk by William Edwards, curator of the Gordon Museum of Guys's Hospital, one of the most interesting and challenging pathological collections. A little jem.

 

Booking is strongly advised. Call 0207 188 2679

or email curator@thegarret.org.uk to reserve a place

 

 

 

 

 

 



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