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Mary Cappello

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by Swallow: Foreign Bodies


  color, Jackson’s appreciation of

  Conwell, Russell H.

  Conwellana-Templana Collection at Temple University

  Cornell, Joseph; collages; comparisons with Jackson; Cornell boxes; Dovecote series of boxes

  Cortez, Marie

  Cronin, A. J.

  Crosby, Bing

  crying: and children’s inspiration of fbdies; Jackson’s responses to cruelty; the swallowing of tears

  The Culture of Cities (Mumford)

  Curtis, Edward

  Daly, William H.

  Davy, Welsh

  Delaney, Martin

  “Dem Dry Bones” (spiritual)

  dentistry

  Derryberry, Margaret; account of swallowing a hatpin while crying; case in Jackson’s Diseases of the Air and Food Passages of Foreign-Body Origin

  Descartes, René

  Dhody, Anna

  Dickens, Charles

  “Discussion on Overlooked Cases of Foreign Body in the Air and Food Passages” (Jackson)

  Diseases of the Air and Food Passages of Foreign-Body Origin (Jackson); on carelessness and fbdy ingestion; on children putting things in their mouths; difficult cases of multiple fbdies; hysterically fabricated fbdies; as Jackson’s gospel; Margaret Derryberry’s case in; on mediastinal emphysema; medical illustrations and Cornell’s Forgotten Game; observations of patient Michael H.

  Diseases of the Nose, Throat and Ear (Jackson)

  Dissection: Photographs of a Rite of Passage in American Medicine, 1880-1930 (Warner)

  dissection and medical training

  Donné, Alfred

  Douglass, Frederick

  dysphagia: case of Andrew C.; globus hystericus (lump in throat) and

  Eakins, Thomas

  eating; chewing; decorum and; faux-food and play eating; force-feeding; shame and. See also swallowing

  eating disorders: night eating syndrome; nocturnal sleep-related eating disorder; orthorexia nervosa; pica

  Edison, Thomas

  Edmonson, James

  Edwards, Ralph

  Einhorn, Max

  Elliot, Cass (Mama Cass)

  endoscopic inventions and techniques; acoustical diagnoses; artistry; bronchoscopes; circus metaphors; distal lights; esophagoscope and esophagoscopies; experiments on dogs; exposing the larynx for inspection; Foley catheters; forceps; French and; gynecology and; history of endoscopic instruments; inducing a child to open her mouth; instruments designed for each fbdy and mechanical problem; Jackson’s criticism of predecessors; Jackson’s medical illustrations and endoscopic artwork; Jackson’s Old Sunrise Mills studio; Jackson’s skill and tactile sensitivity/dexterity; near-accidents and misuse; protocols and methods of use; prototypes and early surgical tools; self-scoping; standardization and changes in instrumentation; sword swallowing and; wood crafting and. See also bronchoscopes and bronchoscopy; esophagoscopes

  Energine Newsreels

  epiglottis

  esophagoscopes; anatomy of the esophagus and bronchi; and children who had ingested lye; Jackson on act of removal of safety pin with; methods of use; sword swallowing and; transnasal esophagoscopy

  esophagus: sword swallowing and; the upper and lower esophageal sphincters

  Espeland, Pamela

  Evening Public Ledger

  The Evolution of Physics (Einstein and Infeld)

  The Evolution of Surgical Instruments (Kirkup)

  “extreme crafts,”

  Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Monthly

  Eye and Ear Hospital (Pittsburgh)

  Fanon, Frantz

  fast food hamburgers

  fbdies (foreign bodies): aspirated/ ingested; bezoars; cancer as; collections in other museums of curiosa; difficult cases of multiple fbdies; the genitals and rectum; Gross’s treatise and nineteenth-century methods of extraction; hysterically fabricated (“phantom fbdies”); Jackson’s efforts to convince doctors of commonness of; obstructing but not cutting off an airway; paths of movement within the body; Poulet’s two-volume treatise on surgical practice; the “stomach contents display” at Glore Psychiatric Museum; symptomless; what constitutes an fbdy; X-ray detection. See also Chevalier Jackson Foreign Body Collection at the Mütter Museum; fbdies (reasons for ingestion); fbdies (swallowed)

  fbdies (reasons for ingestion); acts of willful violence; carelessness; class; devotion or fidelity to a cause; force-feeding; gender differences; holiday catastrophes; hunger; hysteria and “hysterical swallowing,” ; love; pica and other eating disorders; purposeful swallowing for pleasure; racial explanations; as way of getting to know the world through the mouth

  fbdies (swallowed); blood; categories and examples in the Chevalier Jackson Collection; coins; the Eldorado 5B pencil; “fast food foreign objects,” ; hairpins; hatpins; human hair; hysterically fabricated frogs and toads; jackstones (jacks); live fish; peanuts/ peanut kernels; the Perfect Attendance pin; pins and needles; safety pins, spoon handles; tacks; toy dogs; toy opera glasses; Velcro; written message-bearing fbdies (fbdies that need to be read)

  Federal Caustic Act (1927)

  Ferenczi, Sándor

  Fetterolf, George H.

  Fisher, Carrie

  Five Chairs in Philadelphia (Jackson’s positions and affiliations)

  Foley catheters

  Food Network (television)

  force-feeding

  Foreign Bodies in the Air and Food Passages (Charted Experience in Cases from No. 631 to No. 1155) (Jackson)

  “Foreign-body Ingestion: Characteristics and Outcomes in a Lower Socioeconomic Population with Predominantly Intentional Ingestion” (Palta et al.)

  Forsberg, Brian

  Fortune’s Bones: The Manumission Requiem (Nelson)

  Franklin Institute (Philadelphia)

  Freedgood, Elaine

  French, Thomas R.: articles; correspondence with Jackson

  French Academy of Medicine

  French Hospital (New York City)

  Freud, Sigmund

  gag reflex

  Garrison, William Lloyd

  gastric lavage (stomach pumping)

  “gavage” (force-feeding)

  gender: Jackson’s autobiographical depiction of himself as female-identified boy; Jackson’s gendered explanations for ingestion of fbdies; medical misogyny; sword swallowers and performance of female submissiveness. See also women

  Genova, Mary

  Gitlin, David F.

  globus hystericus

  Glore, George

  Glore Psychiatric Museum and “stomach contents display” (St. Joseph, Missouri)

  Graduate Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

  Greentree School

  Grit

  Gross, Samuel D.

  “Gut Feminism” (Wilson)

  Hacking, Ian

  hardware, swallowing of

  hatpins: and history of women’s power; swallowing while crying

  Hellman, Rudolph

  Hellman, Wayne

  henbane

  Hendrix, Jimi

  Hirschowitz Fiberscope

  “History of Gastroscopy” (Walk)

  “History of the Instruments for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy” (Edmonson)

  holiday catastrophes

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell

  Holmes, Thomas

  Hopkins, George G.

  Hopkins, Gerard Manley

  The Horse and Buggy Doctor (Hertzler)

  Houdini, Harry

  Howe, Elias

  Huizinga, Eelco

  Human Ostrich

  Hygeia

  hyoscyamine

  hysteria and voluntary swallowing/ aspiration of fbdies; aerophagy; Ferenczi and; frogs and toads; globus hystericus; hysterically fabricated fbdies (“phantom foreign bodies”); Mütter’s extraction of fbdies from a “young hysterical female,” Wilson and the “biological unconscious,” ; women swallowing hardware; X-rays and

  Idlewood Cottage Hotel

  Ig Nobel Prize

  I’m a Stranger
Here Myself (Nash)

  Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (Jacobs)

  instruments of endoscopy and bronchoscopy. See bronchoscopes and bronchoscopy; endoscopic inventions and techniques; esophagoscopes

  Jackson, Alice

  Jackson, Chevalier; admirers; ambidexterity; autobiography; bequeathment of his collection; bone collecting; burial site- 62; childhood and early life; early building projects and inventions; early medical practice; early prototypes of rescue; end of life and preparations for his death; endoscopic inventions; hands of; legacy and lasting reputation; letters, postcards, and correspondence; medical education/training; minimalist diet; Old Sunrise Mills studio; photographs; physical appearance; popular lectures (“chalk talks”); press depictions; racism and; recurring identity themes and images in life’s work; signature; silence and; traumatic childhood experiences; travels in the American South; views on plagiarism; writings. See also Jackson, Chevalier (artwork); Jackson, Chevalier (personality)

  Jackson, Chevalier (artwork): aesthetic philosophy and; Cornell’s boxes and; and early medical photography with microscopic daguerreotypes; landscapes and portraits; medical illustrations and endoscopic art

  Jackson, Chevalier (personality); abstinence from alcohol and tobacco; aloofness and social reticence; asceticism and abstemiousness; cautiousness/reluctance to take chances; childhood traumas and; friendships and personal relationships; as pack rat and collector of junk; rare expressions of anger; regrets involving silence and reticence; self-effacement and humility; self-proclaimed unmanliness and gentleness; self-reliance and trust in his own hands; as solitary loner

  Jackson, Chevalier L. (son); endoscopic work; and father’s death; postcard sent to his father (a “negro scene”); relationship with father

  Jackson, Jo

  Jackson, Michael

  jackstones (jacks)

  Jacobs, Harriet

  James, William

  Japanese populations

  Jefferson Hospital: Jackson’s bronchoscopic clinic; Jackson’s early museum of fbdies

  Jefferson Medical College (Philadelphia): cadavers used for dissection; faculty caricature; Jackson’s medical training; Jackson’s professorship of laryngology; Mütter and

  Jefferson University Archives

  John Quincy Adams Library of Otolaryngology (Alexandria, Virginia)

  Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious (Freud)

  Joseph B., case of

  Kahrilas, Peter J.

  Keller, Marjorie

  Killian, Gustav

  Kings County Hospital (Brooklyn)

  Kings County Medical Society

  Kirkup, John

  Kirstein, Alfred

  Kurzweil, Allen

  Kussmaul, Adolf

  Laryngoscope

  larynx: exposing for inspection during endoscopy; human speech and; Jackson’s illustrations/endoscopic artwork; physiological function in crying and laughing; physiology of swallowing and; sword swallowing and

  Lebanon Cemetery

  Leiter, Josef

  The Life of Chevalier Jackson: An Autobiography; aesthetic philosophy in; on the aggression necessary to violate children’s bodies; animal themes; on boyhood “phases,” ; childhood traumas; composition; on crying in response to cruelty; depictions of cruelty; on diet and abstemiousness; disregard of chronology; editor’s objections; on endoscopy with esophagoscope; on holding the Five Chairs; on marriage to Alice; on most difficult case; original thematic orientation; on patient Michael H.; prototypes of rescue and early experiences rooted in curiosity/dread; racism and; readership and popularity; reviews; self-depictions as female-identified unmasculine boy; slave narratives and; third person point-of-view

  Literary Digest

  “Little Red Riding Hood,”

  Lunch (film)

  lye, children’s ingestion of

  machines: bodies as; the machine age and swallowing hardware

  Mackenzie, Sir Morell

  Madame Curie (Curie)

  Mahoney, Arlene

  Mahoney, Walter H.

  Major, Ralph

  Mallarmé, Stéphane

  Manges, Willis F.

  The Marrow of Tradition (Chesnutt)

  Mason, Jennifer

  “Materialization in Globus Hystericus” (Ferenczi)

  McCrae, James

  mediastinal emphysema

  Meyer, Dan

  Michael H., case of

  Miksch, C.

  Missouri Department of Mental Health

  Modern Times (film)

  Morange, Jean

  mouths: chewing; children knowing the world through; dentistry and; getting children to open; lips and; love and; orality and; sword swallowing and; words (language) and. See also eating; swallowing

  Mütter, Thomas Dent; extraction of fbdies from a “young hysterical female,” life and career

  Mütter Museum: Historical Medical Photographs (Lindgren, ed.)

  Mütter Museum of College of Physicians of Philadelphia; archives; endowment and Mütter’s original collection; Jackson’s bequeathment to; Margaret Derryberry’s hatpin. See also Chevalier Jackson Foreign Body Collection at the Mütter Museum

  Mütter Museum of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia (Worden)

  “mystery bones” found in Jackson’s attic

  National Library of Medicine, archives of; case history of Andrew C.; case history of Mary Genova; case report for the Perfect Attendance pin; French’s admiring letters to Jackson; Jackson’s calendar book

  Negus, V.E.

  Nelson, Marilyn

  “New Mechanical Problems in the Bronchoscopic Extraction of Foreign Bodies from the Lungs and Esophagus” (Jackson)

  New Yorker

  New York Medical Journal and Medical Record

  New York Times

  Nietzsche, Friedrich

  night eating syndrome (NES)

  Nitze, Maximilian

  nocturnal sleep-related eating disorder (NS-RED)

  Norris, Charles

  North Star

  Nuland, Sherwin

  Old Sunrise Mills (Jackson’s studio); “mystery bones” found in attic of; shop for designing/producing endoscopic instrument prototypes

  Old Yeller (film)

  orthorexia nervosa

  Out of Africa (Dinesen)

  Pappas, Mrs. Paul

  Patinkin, Mandy

  Patterson, Ellen J.

  Peña, Carolyn Thomas de la

  Perfect Attendance pin

  peristaltic reflex

  Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery (Jackson)

  “-phagy” (Greek suffix)

  “The Phenomena of Hysterical Materialization” (Ferenczi)

  Philadelphia Bulletin

  Phillips, Adam

  photomicrographs and early medical photography

  pica

  Pilling Company

  “pin money,”

  Piquenias, Angelique

  Pittsburgh Dispatch

  Pittsburgh Historian

  plagiarism

  Plessy v. Ferguson

  Pope, Alexander

  Pope, Vicki

  Popular Science

  Porter, Preserved

  Pottstown News

  Poulet, Alfred

  Practical Treatise on Foreign Bodies in the Air Passages (Gross)

  Public Ledger (Philadelphia)

  Purcell, Rosamond

  race and racism in the U.S.; African American cadavers used for dissections in medical training; animal rights activism and; case of the Perfect Attendance pin and four-year old patient Fred J.; Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition and the choking child; Jackson at Idlewood Hotel; Jackson’s autobiography and slave narratives; Jackson’s medical ethics and; racial/eugenicist explanations for fbdy ingestion

  Raffel, Dawn

  Rapunzel syndrome

  Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan

  Reagan, Ronald

  The Red Pony (Steinbeck)

  Reed, Lady Sandra
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  reflexes and swallowing

  retch reflex

  Robertson, Harold F.

  Rogers, Kelvin Arthur

  Roma, Rhea

  Rose, Frank A.

  Ross, Alexander

  Rush, Benjamin

  safety pins, swallowing of

  Samaritan Hospital (Philadelphia)

  Sawday, Jonathan

  Section of Laryngology of the Royal Society of Medicine

  Seitz, Phillip R.

  Self magazine

  self-scoping

  Sewell, Anna

  Shallow, T. A.

  silence

  Sims, J. Marion

  Smith, R. P.

  Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of American History

  Society for the Protection of Animals (SPCA)

  Solomon, Deborah

  Souda, M. Attie

  Southard, E. E.

  speculum

  State Lunatic Asylum No. 2 (St. Joseph, Missouri)

  “The Steel Windpipe” (Bulgakov)

  Steinbeck, John

  Stiegler, Lillian N.

  stomachs: gastric lavage (stomach pumping); the hysterical swallow and; physiology of swallowing and; the “stomach contents display” at Glore Psychiatric Museum; sword swallowing and; and the vocabulary of swallowing

  stomach tubes

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher

  The Summing Up (Maugham)

  Svankmajer, Jan

  swallowing; the association of airway and foodway (aspiration and ingestion); as basic human behavior/bodily process; carelessness and; emotion and; formative swallows; hardware and; “hysterical swallowing,” the language/vocabulary of; physiology of; prenatal practicing; as psychosocial; reflexes and. See also fbdies (reasons for ingestion); sword swallowing

  Sword Swallower’s Association International

  sword swallowing; being a spectator to; and children who had ingested lye; Christian audiences and; circus metaphors and Jackson’s endoscopic inventions/techniques; contributions to esophagoscopic and endoscopic research; control of reflexes in; Meyer’s act; physiological complexity of; the practicing of; self-scoping and; thought and; women performers

  “Sword Swallowing and Its Side Effects” (Witcombe and Meyer)

  Taylor, Elizabeth

  tears, the swallowing of. See also crying

  teeth grinding

 

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