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One small photo with caption on each otherwise empty page was not what I expected. Save your money and just borrow this from the library. I've seen a couple of tours of the museum on television, and thought this would make nice gift for my daughter who is interested in such things. Not enough information, and considering all the exhibits that are in the museum, not enough photos.
A conversation starter for sure. Very unique book. Not for the weak as some photos are pretty graphic.
The photos are amazing and I've always been interested in such oddities and this definitely was satisfying. Even though I had to wait weeks for it, the book is absolutely breath-taking. The book has lovely thick pages and the simple layout and authentic looking photos just make the book seem so much more worth it.
The photo (striking to me because I have a neurological disability as well and after recovery from this disease people have long term after effects and disabilities that are neurological) unconsciously reminisant of the famous Victorian era photo "Fading Away" shows a girl in what appears to be a coma from that disease and one would assume she died after. But the Mutter Museum although a sort of "odditorium" is also a scientific museum to inform people so I want facts. Shock value I'll grant you but its a little lacking in the "informative" department. One photo particulary striking (among many though I'll choose one) says "meningitis, injected with serum, discharged 5 days later". Many say "unknown disease" although a current scientist or medical provider could make a good guesstimate from the photo alone. But when it says she was "discharged five days later" she recovered, at least enough to be released. But that infomation (scientifically correct) is missing.
But with the long term after effects of the disease people would often develop mental retardation or mental illness and in those times eventually end up in institutions which would not occur today". The museum promises to be "shockingly informative". What would the people have gone through. I could say I'd prefer the former being a person with a disability myself (some of the photos here of people with "afflictions" like cerebral palsy would today lead normal lives) but also like any human being can understand your Malady of the Month curiousity about the whole thing and for that I'd reccomend the book "Death Scenes" (if you can stomach it and frankly the intro to that book has far more informative analysis of the photos than anything in this book). Obviously, the photos taken at the time and their captions don't depict current scientific knowledge. What would happen now.
What happenend. Good enough. The truth is this books is in between two worlds, that of the scientific and that of the freakshow. What was the treatment at the time. A good "update" might read "the antitoxin available at the time would stop the progress of the disease and enable people to live though not nearly as effective as antibiotics did save some lives.
This is a good source of interest for human oddities, and of history for conditions that are routinely corrected now.
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