New Release: Art, Medicine, and Femininity

January 24 2024

Image of New Release: Art, Medicine, and Femininity

Picture: McGill-Queen's University Press

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

McGill-Queen's University Press in Canada have just released the following intriguing book. Art, Medicine, and Femininity: Visualising the Morphine Addict in Paris, 1870–1914 was written by the Edinburgh College of Art scholar Hannah Halliwell and is released this month.

According to the book's blurb:

“Paris is the centre of the cult,” wrote Robert Hichens in Felix, his 1902 novel on the rising number of morphine addictions in Europe. In Paris, artists depicted the morphine addict numerous times, yet they disregarded the reality of France’s addiction problem: male medical professionals made up the highest proportion of people who used morphine habitually. In oil paintings, caricatures, and lithographs, artists such as Pablo Picasso, Eugène Grasset, and Théophile Steinlen almost always depicted the morphine addict as a deviant female figure.

Artists sensationalized addiction to elicit shock and stand out in the crowded Parisian art market. Their artworks show influences from contemporary medical texts on addiction and artistic depictions of sex workers, lesbians, and other women deemed socially deviant. These images proliferated in French society, creating false narratives about who was or could become addicted to drugs and setting a precedent for the visualization of drug addiction. Hannah Halliwell links the feminization of addiction to broader anxieties in late nineteenth-century France - the defeat by Prussia in 1871, concerns about social decadence, a declining population, and a rising feminist movement.

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