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A Surgical Temptation

9 bytes added, 6 March
re-written biography
[[Image:A surgical temptation.jpg|left]]
{{BookInfo
|Author=[[Robert Darby]]
|ASIN=B00F19LK4A
}}
[[Image:A surgical temptation.jpg|left]]
In the eighteenth century, the Western world viewed circumcision as an embarrassing disfigurement peculiar to Jews. A century later, British doctors urged parents to circumcise their sons as a routine precaution against every imaginable sexual dysfunction, from syphilis and phimosis to [[masturbation]] and bed-wetting. Thirty years later the procedure again came under hostile scrutiny, culminating in its disappearance during the 1960s.
== Biography ==
I am Darby was an independent scholar and freelance writer living in Canberra, the capital of Australia. I He began my his writing and research career as a literary historian, with a {{PhD}} on Australian literature and politics in the 1930s, but my his interests have broadened since then to include many topics in cultural, social and medical history, as well as ethics and current affairs. My His major published work so far has been a detailed account of the rise and fall of routine "health" circumcision in Britain (''A Surgical Temptation'', 2005), and since then I have he has written widely on medical, historical and ethical aspects of both male and female circumcision - which I regard he regarded as primarily a [[human rights]] and social justice issue, not really a medical issue at all. I have He has also prepared a collection of the medical writings of Arthur Conan Doyle, ''Round the Red Lamp'' (Valancourt Books, 2007), and an edited edition of ''Elements of Social Science'' by the great Victorian iconoclast George Drysdale. Although he Drysdale is largely forgotten today, his book was extremely popular throughout the second half of the 19th Century as a source of information and advice on "the facts of life" and especially contraception. My Darby's most recent article is "The child's right to an open future: Is the principle applicable to non-therapeutic [[circumcision]]", published in the ''Journal of Medical Ethics'', July 2013.  For further information see the following websites:
{{LINKS}}
* http://www.amazon.com/Surgical-Temptation-Demonization-Foreskin-Circumcision/dp/022610110X/
{{ABBR}}<!--{{REF}}-->
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