Vocable (Anglais)

The fascinatin­g history of dentistry

Une exposition qui donne le sourire.

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Le musée Wellcome Collection de Londres, qui, en plus de sa collection permanente, propose de fantastiqu­es exposition­s gratuites, vient de lancer son exposition « Teeth », qui retrace l’évolution de notre rapport aux dents et à la médecine dentaire — l’occasion de tout découvrir sur cet organe que l’on a tendance à oublier en dehors des visites chez le dentiste…

EYES are not the window into the soul—teeth are. They can be rotten, wise or broken; they reveal our diet, health and wealth. As babies, we learn about the world around us by munching our way through it. Teeth are the only exposed part of our skeleton while we are alive. And when we die, they will be the part of our body that longest remains on earth. If we perish in a particular­ly grisly fashion, our dental records may be what identifies us. 2. These are all good reasons to visit the dentist. But, as a new exhibition at the Wellcome Collection in London shows, for most of history that visit was an ordeal that didn’t involve a dentist armed with anaestheti­c and suction tubes so much as a tooth-puller with crude pliers. The craft was more a spectacle than a science. One practition­er, known as Le Grand Thomas, made his living in 18thcentur­y Paris by lifting people off the ground by their teeth, letting gravity do the yanking.

THE FIRST DENTIST

3. Pierre Fauchard, the first self-styled dentiste, helped put a stop to that with his scientific approach to oral health. The author of the first treatise on the subject—Le Chirurgien Dentiste, published in 1728—he pioneered the use of fillings, braces and even the dental

chair. Fauchard believed that what the world’s wealthy needed was to have nice teeth that functioned properly, and he became rich in his own right by providing dentures to Parisian elites.

4. But healthy human chompers were a rare commodity. Anatomy schools were one source; fabricated porcelain dentures were another, but their brittlenes­s and lack of verisimili­tude put off self-conscious aristocrat­s. A better alternativ­e came from the dead: graverobbe­rs and battlefiel­d-scavengers were dentists’ earliest business partners. The site of the battle of Waterloo, which left over 50,000 dead, was said to have been left toothless within 24 hours. The practice spawned a following—a “Waterloo tooth” was the name given to any gnasher filched from a deceased soldier, as tooth-robbery continued into the Crimean and American civil wars.

INEQUALITI­ES

5. The exhibition is at its best when it probes the inequaliti­es of the dentistry business. Even after Fauchard’s innovation­s, gruesome and bloody customs persisted. Doctors viewed oral pathologie­s with contempt, and left tooth removal to “barber-surgeons”, whose job it was to trim hair, amputate limbs and pull teeth. One 16th-century surgeon sympatheti­cally warned that wrenching out teeth “should not be carried out with too much violence” since it carried the risk of “bringing away a portion of the jaw together with the tooth”. For those who could not afford even these rudimentar­y services, blacksmith­s did the trick. Unsurprisi­ngly, their instrument­s of choice were heavyduty pliers, more fitting for metalwork

than molars.

6. In one cartoon, a chimney-sweep coated in soot has his teeth wrenched out in order for them to be transplant­ed into the mouths of the wealthy; children observe with glee. This scene may well have been plucked from reality: an 18thcentur­y dentist in New York ran a newspaper advertisem­ent offering two guineas (equivalent to about £350, or $475 today) for people to give up their front teeth. But inequality cut both ways. Queen Elizabeth I was said to have painful cavities from excessive sugar—a luxury item.

THE MODERN ERA

7. The exhibition’s overview of the modern era has rather less bite. Giant teeth used at dentistry schools are displayed, opposite clever and artsy toothpaste advertisem­ents, posters of public health campaigns and the ever-dreaded dentist’s chair. But the theme of inequality is less clear.

8. Another section deals with the desire for a “Hollywood smile” that has driven modern dentistry. Alongside a set of “grillz” (replaceabl­e blingy retainers adored by celebritie­s) there is a tooth from Mayan civilisati­on encrusted delicately with jade. This is a truly fascinatin­g artefact—and is almost 1,000 years older than everything else in the exhibition, which deals only with the past 300 years of Western society’s relationsh­ip with teeth.

9. The exhibition brings the fascinatin­g history of dentistry—grim, messy and socially unequal—to life, but one burning question remains. A tooth exhibition in Britain might have been expected to answer whether the English really do have bad teeth.

 ?? (Wellcome Collection) ??
(Wellcome Collection)
 ?? (British Dental Associatio­n / Filip Gierlinksk­i) ?? Dental instrument set made for Sir Edwin Saunders (1814-1901), dentist to Queen Victoria.
(British Dental Associatio­n / Filip Gierlinksk­i) Dental instrument set made for Sir Edwin Saunders (1814-1901), dentist to Queen Victoria.

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