From Face/Off to the Face Race: An Emotional History of the Face Transplant (Public Lecture, York, 22 January 2018)

The Centre for Global Health Histories warmly invites you to a public lecture at the University of York on 22 January. Dr Fay Bound Alberti will present a talk entitled ‘From Face/Off to the Face Race: An Emotional History of the Face Transplant’ on Monday 22 January 2018, in The Treehouse, Berrick Saul Building, University of York, starting at 17:00 pm. All are welcome and no booking is necessary. Please do circulate to colleagues, students or friends you feel would be interested in attending.

Isabelle Dinoire, the world’s first face transplant recipient, died in April 2016, just eleven years after the procedure that brought her unwanted fame and media attention. More than forty face transplants have taken place around the world since 2005. Medical debates centre primarily on such concerns as immunosuppressant use and organ donation. Far less attention has been paid to the ethical, emotional and psychological history of face transplants and their meanings for personal and social identity, though these were concerns of the earliest post-war reconstructive surgeons. This talk explores the emotional history and ethics of face transplants, raising questions about gender, facial politics, and the limits of medical science.

Please see for more details, see the event webpage.

 

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