Making Images/Making Bodies: Visibilizing and Disciplining through Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

This article analyzes how the medical gaze made possible by MRI operates in radiological laboratories. It argues that although computer-assisted medical imaging technologies such as MRI shift radiological analysis to the realm of cyborg visuality, radiological analysis continues to depend on visualization produced by other technologies and diagnostic inputs. In the radiological laboratory, MRI is used to produce diverse sets of images of the internal parts of the body to zero in and visually extract the pathology (or prove its nonexistence). Visual extraction of pathology becomes possible, however, because of the visual training of the radiologists in understanding and interpreting anatomic details of the whole body. These two levels of viewing constitute the bifocal vision of the radiologists. To make these levels of viewing work complementarily, the body, as it is presented in the body atlases, is made notational (i.e., converted into a set of isolable, disjoint, and differentiable parts).

[1]  L. Kelley,et al.  Sectional Anatomy for Imaging Professionals , 1996 .

[2]  J. Rabins,et al.  Techniques of the observer: On vision and modernity in the nineteenth century , 1992 .

[3]  Mary Elizabeth Lynch,et al.  The externalized retina: Selection and mathematization in the visual documentation of objects in the life sciences , 1988 .

[4]  P. Gummett The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in the Sociology and History of Technology , 1988 .

[5]  M. Mcneil Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature , 1992 .

[6]  Nelson Goodman,et al.  Of Mind and Other Matters. , 1984 .

[7]  L. Baden,et al.  "Images in clinical medicine". , 2001, Connecticut medicine.

[8]  B. Latour Pandora's Hope: Essays on the Reality of Science Studies , 1999 .

[9]  Ian F. Sutton Body criticism: imaging the unseen in Enlightenment art and medicine , 1993, Medical History.

[10]  M. Hörmann MRI of the brain. Normal anatomy and normal variants , 1997 .

[11]  Barbara Maria Stafford,et al.  Body Criticism: Imaging the Unseen in Enlightenment Art and Medicine , 1994 .

[12]  James Elkins,et al.  The domain of images , 1999 .

[13]  A Beaulieu,et al.  Voxels in the Brain , 2001, Social studies of science.

[14]  Marsha Hanen,et al.  Of Mind and Other Matters , 1985 .

[15]  Sarah Kember Virtual Anxiety: Photography, New Technologies and Subjectivity , 1998 .

[16]  Michel Foucault,et al.  The Order of Things , 2010 .

[17]  L. Daston,et al.  The Image of Objectivity , 1992 .

[18]  Michael Lynch,et al.  Laboratory Space and the Technological Complex: An Investigation of Topical Contextures , 1991, Science in Context.

[19]  W. Mitchell The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-Photographic Era , 1992 .

[20]  J. Stacey Teratologies: A Cultural Study of Cancer , 1997 .

[21]  S. Kosslyn Image and Brain: The Resolution of the Imagery Debate , 1994, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[22]  Felix Stalder,et al.  Pandora's Hope: Essays on the Reality of Science Studies , 2000, Inf. Soc..

[23]  G A Miller,et al.  How we think about cognition, emotion, and biology in psychopathology. , 1996, Psychophysiology.

[24]  K. Knorr-Cetina,et al.  Image Dissection in Natural Scientific Inquiry , 1990 .

[25]  Catherine Waldby,et al.  Revenants: The Visible Human Project and the Digital Uncanny , 1997 .

[26]  J. Mazziotta,et al.  Brain Mapping: The Methods , 2002 .

[27]  J. Elkins Two Conceptions of the Human Form: Bernard Siegfried Albinus and Andreas Vesalius , 1986 .

[28]  B. Pasveer,et al.  Knowledge of shadows: the introduction of X-ray images in medicine. , 1989, Sociology of health & illness.

[29]  B. Good,et al.  Medicine, rationality, and experience , 1993 .

[30]  D. DiSantis,et al.  Naked to the Bone: Medical Imaging in the Twentieth Century , 1998 .

[31]  Michael Lynch,et al.  Discipline and the Material Form of Images: An Analysis of Scientific Visibility , 1985 .

[32]  M. Foucault The Birth of the Clinic , 1963 .

[33]  C. Orona,et al.  Teratologies: A Cultural Study of Cancer , 1998 .

[34]  A. Beaulieu Images Are Not the (Only) Truth: Brain Mapping, Visual Knowledge, and Iconoclasm , 2002 .

[35]  Ernst Gombrich,et al.  Standards of Truth: The Arrested Image and the Moving Eye , 1980, Critical Inquiry.