Between the spring of 1914 and the winter of the following year, the New York surgeon William Sharpe presented a new surgical procedure for spastic paralysis and exhibited his patients on three occasions to different medical societies meeting at the New York Academy of Medicine. Lantern slides, moving pictures, a display of glass jars exposing the brains of children who had died on the operating table, as well as a noisy parade of a dozen children who had survived the procedure made these medical presentations more carnivalesque than the typical Academy talk: the little patients ‘trotted proudly’ down the length of the room, laughing and talking, while the doctors in the audience ‘stood on chairs in order to get a better view’ of the unfolding medical spectacle.Footnote 1 Sharpe had published a preliminary report in the Journal of the American Medical Association claiming that many children diagnosed with spastic paralysis suffered from increased intracranial tension and were therefore good candidates for a subtemporal decompression – a surgical procedure in which a portion of the skull was permanently removed to alleviate the pressure within.Footnote 2 Surgery, Sharpe contended, relieved the paralysis or spasticity in the children’s limbs, allowing them to move more freely, and led as well to a marked improvement in their mental abilities.
Although the presentation was followed each time by contentious discussions in which some doctors, including the prominent neurologist Bernard Sachs, lauded Sharpe’s workFootnote 3 while others expressed scepticism,Footnote 4 what got Sharpe into actual trouble was not an indictment of the surgeon’s skill, or doubt over the permanence of the children’s improvement, or the question of whether surgical intervention was justified. Rather, one of these meetings – on 16 March 1914 – became a scandalous event when in its immediate aftermath local newspapers recounted Sharpe’s presentation in great detail, under dramatic headlines implying that the surgeon had cured the children’s paralysis. Sharpe was immediately called before the Comitia Minora of the Medical Association of the Greater City of New York to answer to the accusation that he had engineered his own publicity by sneaking a reporter into the lecture hall.Footnote 5 Although not all local medical societies were concerned about being the subject of newspaper coverage, the newly revised American Medical Association (AMA) principles of ethics did uphold the impropriety of claiming radical cures and more generally of advertising, however indirect, including by means of ‘furnishing or inspiring newspaper or magazine comments concerning cases in which the physician has been or is concerned’.Footnote 6 Whether or not this was true in Sharpe’s case – and he certainly defended himself successfully at the timeFootnote 7 – his flair for the dramatic, his excessive therapeutic optimism, and the appearance that he was courting the press did carry a steep professional price: Sharpe was excluded from an emerging and exclusive community of surgeons seeking to build the foundations of a new surgical specialty – neurosurgery.
When the founding members established the first neurosurgical society a few years later, their aim was not to open the door to all surgeons interested or skilled enough in performing surgery on the nervous system, but rather to bring together a select group of men whose professional and moral qualities were deemed to be distinctly superior and who were held to a much higher standard than the rank-and-file of the more ‘democratic’ medical associations, such as the local medical societies, the AMA, and even the more selective American College of Surgeons. This ethos meant, in part, that academic surgeons whose surgical epistemology was rooted in the experimental laboratory were generally privileged over those who merely practised surgery. It also meant that in the process of fashioning a neurosurgical persona, this first generation sanctioned specific norms of conduct both in the operating room and on the public stage, as the latter might be reflected in a doctor’s engagement with the press. These norms of conduct were underwritten by similar moral imperatives, self-control chiefly among them. In an age dominated by anxieties over ‘the spectacularization of surgery’Footnote 8 – both in and out of the operating theatre – surgical skill had to be tempered by judgement and restraint. Indeed, the most celebrated neurosurgical figure of this period, Harvey Cushing, argued that the most dangerous surgeons were not those with mediocre skill – the ‘somewhat awkward craftsmen’ – but rather those ‘whose operative technic exceeds their judgment as to when it should be put to use’.Footnote 9 In the first decades of the twentieth century, the surgeon’s skill was pitted against his judgement as reflected in both surgical and public conduct, and the latter was deemed of critical importance for an aspiring neurosurgeon.
Historical contingency complicates a simplistic reading of skill as a self-explanatory and evidently positive attribute. This article highlights the extent to which the relationship between surgical skill and professional judgement is reflected in broader concerns that shape the landscape of medicine at a given time and serves certain social goals. To this end, the article draws attention to the space where skill was performed in the presence of a select audience: the specialist society.Footnote 10 One of the functions of such societies, and one that historians have lamented has not been adequately explored, was to negotiate new surgical knowledge and techniques.Footnote 11 Another function was to create a moral economyFootnote 12 of the specialty and to enforce technical, moral, and professional standards at a time when these standards were not yet codified in any other way, such as through standardised training or specialist boards, which were founded decades later.Footnote 13 A related function was to articulate a common identity for an emerging group of specialists. Historians have emphasised the impact of broader cultural values on medicine and the identity of its practitioners,Footnote 14 but less explored has been the role of these specialist medical clubs, which constituted a privileged space in the creation and maintenance of identity.Footnote 15 In founding the Society of Neurological Surgeons (SNS), a few surgeons made choices in including and excluding others, in sanctioning technical and moral values that dictated conduct, and in emphasising self-control in both the public sphere and the operating theatre. These choices reflected wider concerns of early twentieth-century medicine and laid the foundations for the moral economy of a new specialty.
1. The First Neurosurgical Society and the Exclusion of William Sharpe
On 30 December 1919, the American surgeon Harvey Cushing, who had limited his practice to brain surgery since the turn of the century, drafted a statement which he intended to send to a number of North American surgeons. He was formalising the suggestion ‘made by a number of persons whose primary interest lies in the surgery of the nervous system, that a Neuro-Surgical Interurban Club be established’.Footnote 16 Cushing expressed a hope ‘that in this way those interested in this special field might be brought together for an exchange of opinion and with the hope of more rapidly advancing the subject,’ a clear articulation of the belief that within such a social space specialist knowledge could be better articulated.
A first draft of this statement was sent to Ernest Sachs, who had occupied, since 1911, a position in surgery at Washington University in St. Louis.Footnote 17 Cushing confessed that he was ‘conscious of the fact that the general surgeon who is interested primarily in neuro-surgical technique does not talk our language, but it may be necessary to have him included’.Footnote 18 Sachs responded that ‘you and I, I think, are the only ones who are doing that exclusively,’ and he quipped that a society made up of the two of them, as the only properly qualified members, might lack in excitement: ‘though I should like your company, I don’t know whether I would be too monotonous for you!’Footnote 19 The allusion to a shared language was a nod towards the experimental work that formed the basis of the two surgeons’ practice and that elevated them to an elite rank of the profession.
Especially as it was practised by the elites, the surgery of the turn of the century had strong ties to the laboratory, coinciding with the rise of experimental medicine and forging a strong relationship between surgical intervention and knowledge production.Footnote 20 The historian Thomas Schlich has shown that as surgery became ‘a scientific research discipline at the university’, elite surgeons such as Theodor Kocher emphasised repeatedly that ‘only scientific respectability guaranteed the status of the field and its practitioners’,Footnote 21 thus anchoring surgical epistemology in experimental physiology and animal experimentation. Both Cushing and Sachs were part of this tradition. During his European Wanderjahr (1900–1901), Cushing trained with Kocher, in whose laboratory in Berne he studied experimentally the relationship between blood pressure and intracranial pressure. He continued this work in Turin with the physiologist Angelo Mosso, and he brought back from Italy the Riva-Rocci cuff – an instrument for measuring blood pressure quantitatively, which allowed him to chart blood pressure during surgery.Footnote 22 Cushing viewed his ongoing experimental work on animals at the Hunterian laboratory at Johns Hopkins as very important, arguing that ‘for the development of surgical technic no place is comparable to the experimental laboratory’, and that ‘every young surgeon should begin to acquire his operative training in a series of operations on the lower animals’.Footnote 23 While, especially later in his career, he did criticise the crude reduction of medicine to laboratory science,Footnote 24 Cushing did believe that only an experimental setting allowed surgeons-in-training to safely practise their surgical technique, while also having ‘the double advantage of giving them a sufficient laboratory experience to enable them subsequently to pursue to the only place where they are likely to be solved some of the many problems which arise’.Footnote 25 Sachs had enjoyed a similar educational trajectory, having trained with the British surgeon Victor Horsley both in the operating room and the experimental laboratory, where he conducted numerous experiments to probe the structure and functions of the thalamus in monkeys and cats.Footnote 26
Ironically, despite the fact that the conversation had started from the premise that Cushing and Sachs spoke a unique language and were therefore fit only for each other’s company, it was evident that there were enough American surgeons with relevant education, interests and experience, because the conversation quickly turned to an issue that would become a perennial concern for the members of the society in the coming years – that of limiting membership.Footnote 27 After discussing a list of candidates with Sachs, Cushing decided that he ‘would go a step further and only take a very few men for the first meeting:
[the New York surgeon Charles] Elsberg, [the Philadelphia surgeon Charles] Frazier, [the Baltimore surgeon Charles] Bagley, [Walter] Dandy [from Johns Hopkins], Dean Lewis [from Chicago], and [the Rochester, MN surgeon Alfred] Adson with ourselves as a starter. That will make a sufficient number of pioneer members, and we can add the others more safely later on. I can invite [Jason] Mixter and [Gilbert] Horrax [both from Boston] to help out in the meeting here though not as members.Footnote 28
This exchange of letters shows the extent to which an ethos of selectivity and exclusion was an important aspect of the beginnings of neurosurgery as a medical specialty. The goal was not to seek the company of many of the surgeons who were interested in and skillful enough to perform operations on the nervous system; rather the idea was to put together a select group of surgeons with distinct profiles, with specific professional and moral qualities. Both Cushing and Sachs seemed aware of the historical weight of their role as ‘pioneer members’ of such a select club, Cushing going as far as suggesting that Mixter and Horrax were not yet senior enough to be worthy of the title, despite being good enough to ‘help out’ during the first meeting. This exclusionist ethos privileged academically oriented surgeons like Alfred Taylor, who was on the faculty of the Cornell Medical College and practised at the New York Neurological Institute,Footnote 29 or Dean Lewis, who was a well-respected surgeon and anatomist at the University of Chicago, and who resigned two years later probably because his interests were not confined to the narrow field of neurological surgery.Footnote 30
Beyond the provisions of an epistemology anchored in experiment, along with factors such as seniority and academic standing, the exclusion of William Sharpe in particular reveals some of the moral values upon which the SNS and the persona of this new specialist were built. Sharpe’s education had been, in principle, impeccable. One of the first men to train in neurosurgery with Cushing at the Hunterian Laboratory at Johns Hopkins, he had attended Harvard Medical School, where he attained notoriety – and financial success – by tutoring his fellow students. Sharpe developed an interest in neurological surgery after an initial six-month internship with Cushing, and in 1911 he returned to Hopkins as Cushing’s assistant resident after a two-year surgical internship at the Roosevelt Hospital in New York. A year later, Harvard’s President offered him an appointment as the first professor of surgery at the newly established Harvard Medical School of China in Shanghai. Sharpe wrote in his autobiography that Cushing had discouraged him from accepting this position because ‘I would be “throwing myself away” as far as my development in neurosurgery was concerned. Besides, the lack of rigid asepsis, inadequate hospital facilities, and other unfavorable conditions in China would prove an insuperable barrier to competent surgical work, and as a result my surgical discipline would rapidly deteriorate.’Footnote 31 For Cushing surgical practice and skill could only flourish under ‘surgical discipline’, which in turn only the most controlled and select environment would encourage.
Despite Cushing’s explicit disapproval, Sharpe accepted the position and arrived in Shanghai at the beginning of 1912. He spent an adventurous year in China, gaining considerable fame by treating the head injury of the president’s son. When Sharpe returned to New York, he obtained a job as night resident in a private hospital and an appointment as clinical assistant at the New York Neurological Institute. A year later he joined the New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital, running a neurosurgical clinic in the dispensary.Footnote 32
Sharpe considered himself a specialist in neurological surgery. His voluminous 1920 book Diagnosis and Treatment of Brain Injuries listed his professional title as ‘professor of neurologic surgery’ and ‘consulting neurologic surgeon.’ As a practical text, richly illustrated and detailing the hundreds of cases that Sharpe had treated between 1913 and 1918, the book’s purpose was to ‘be of service to the general practitioner and to the general surgeon, and in the cases of brain injuries in newborn babies and children to the obstetrician and to the pediatrician’,Footnote 33 goals that Cushing himself had thought important.Footnote 34 Sharpe was particularly insistent on the need for checking intracranial pressure and alleviating it. Relief could be achieved through a temporal (or subtemporal) decompression, a procedure he had learnt from CushingFootnote 35 and which consisted in the removal of an area of bone in the temporal or subtemporal region to give the brain room to swell. Cushing and other surgeons saw this procedure as a useful palliative measure for inoperable tumours, but Sharpe extended its use to spastic paralysis.Footnote 36
Sharpe – as well as other surgeons who restricted their practice to the nervous system but who were never considered for SNS membership, such as his brother Norman Sharpe and Karl Ney, another New York surgeon – worked in crowded city hospitals or private practice and did not engage in laboratory work. But apart from these differences, Sharpe was seen to have committed a serious professional sin when he appeared to court the press. His Academy presentation – in which he exhibited, paraded, and made the children perform their newly refined bodily and mental skills – ended up in the newspapers, his name indelibly linked to the promise of a radical and curative operation. The neurosurgeons who came together in the early 1920s for the purpose of creating a professional community did not sanction this kind of public spectacle. Nor was this the only such spectacle. Sharpe’s name was all over the newspapers again when he operated on a wealthy young man on trial for stealing platinum from (and then burning down) the chemical laboratory at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville. Sharpe testified that his patient’s criminal behaviour was due to a brain condition for which the surgeon performed a decompression and subsequently secured the man’s acquittal.Footnote 37
Sharpe’s tendency to place himself in the public sphere had disastrous consequences for his inclusion in the new society. Cushing’s 1919 letter to Sachs, in which he had outlined a list of possible candidates for the neurosurgical club, included Sharpe’s name followed by a question mark. Aware that Sharpe’s practice was devoted exclusively to neurological surgery, Cushing had at least entertained the idea of including him. Sachs, however, summarily dismissed him: ‘I question very much whether we ought to include Sharpe’, he wrote to Cushing. ‘I know he is only doing neuro-surgical work, but it seems to me he is “persona non grata” in most groups. I am taking the liberty of enclosing an item which appeared in Pierson’s [sic] Magazine several years ago and which I have kept for just such an occasion.’Footnote 38 An article in Hearst’s magazine published around the same time extols Sharpe’s surgical method and describes at length ‘the most remarkable feats of very recent surgery’ which is transforming ‘feeble-minded, crippled children into relatively normal individuals’.Footnote 39 The first page features pictures of children in before and after poses, and although the surgeon’s name is not explicitly linked to the patients, it was likely Sharpe who provided the photographs.Footnote 40 As mentioned at the beginning of this article, in 1914 Sharpe had successfully defended himself against advertising charges. After a turbulent period in which the code of ethics had been under sustained attack (the advertising clause included), the 1910s were a period in which the AMA took a ‘laissez-faire approach to medical ethics’,Footnote 41 and Sharpe does not seem to have suffered from his conduct. But the surgeons who were laying the foundations for neurosurgery as a surgical specialty saw themselves beholden to a stricter moral code than the general profession as a whole. And thus, despite the fact that he practised well within mainstream medicine and achieved recognition both nationally and internationally,Footnote 42 Sharpe was not seen as morally worthy of belonging to the SNS. He was not an academic surgeon with interests in laboratory experiments, he espoused values that were at odds with those of elite surgeons, and, most damningly, he appeared too eager to engage in flashy performances in the public arena. Sharpe was thus written out of the official history of neurosurgery. When, in 1988, the American neurosurgeon Eben Alexander came across Sharpe’s 1952 autobiography (pointedly entitled Brain Surgeon) he marvelled: ‘How can a neurosurgeon who trained at Harvard and Johns Hopkins and studied under Cushing and Elsberg, who practised in New York City during most of the first half of the twentieth century, and who was the author of three books be virtually unknown to the present generation of neurosurgeons?’Footnote 43 The answer lies in the deliberate marginalisation of Sharpe, and others like him, by the group of surgeons who in the 1920s sought to define the identity of the neurosurgeon and thereby overdetermined the history of the specialty.
2. Character and the Early Twentieth-Century Surgeon
The concern with the moral character of the neurosurgeon, which prompted the close scrutiny to which Sachs and Cushing had subjected Sharpe, occurred in a specific cultural milieu and can be explained by the particular challenges that surgery faced at the time. In the first decades of the twentieth century, some surgeons began to express an urgent desire to differentiate their practice from those of whom they disapproved. The establishment of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) in 1913, with its dual mission of standardising surgical practice and marginalising surgeons who were performing unnecessary procedures, was part of this endeavour.Footnote 44 In this context, an appeal to the importance of ‘character’ became ubiquitous. In 1919, William Mayo declared in his presidential address that
in the adoption of standards or requirements for admission into the American College of Surgeons, character should be first considered. The dishonest, conscienceless man who has surgical skill is most dangerous in any community. Unnecessary operations, even when performed with a high order of technical ability, are the bane of present-day surgery, but, owing largely to the American College of Surgeons, such practices are markedly on the wane.Footnote 45
The ACS saw itself from the beginning as fulfilling the important task of being a moral arbiter, formally requiring that its fellows not engage in practices such as fee-splitting.Footnote 46 By 1924, Charles Mayo was able to note the decline of this practice, reaffirming in his presidential address that ‘one of the aims of the College is to smoke these offenders out into the open’.Footnote 47 The following year, president Rudolph Matas decried the surgeon who brought disrepute to surgery – no longer ‘the ordinary gross, vulgar, ignorant and grotesque quack who was so familiar in past generations … but rather a ‘more subtle type of quack … because they live in the fold and are not easy to recognize as they are disguised in our own garb’.Footnote 48 These surgeons, motivated by money or ‘insanely ambitious for reputation and prestige as marvelous operators, allow their vanity and their reason to out-strip their morals’ by performing unnecessary surgery. According to Matas, the College stimulated ‘the cultivation of a surgical conscience’,Footnote 49 a crucial attribute for a surgeon because:
When a man has neither conscience nor character he cannot be a good man, and if he is not a good man he cannot be a good surgeon. And no matter how skillfully he may take out appendices, gall bladders, resect stomachs, do hernias, and other fine jobs in surgery, we don’t want him, and he need not apply for Fellowship in the American College of Surgeons.Footnote 50
This preoccupation with character, with the potentially problematic tension between surgical skill and surgical judgement which only character could arbitrate successfully, defined the mission of the ACS, and along with the question of formal examination, it led to disagreements about the stringency of admission criteria.Footnote 51 A 1924 petition, for instance, demanded that ‘more rigid tests could be made as to the character, training and intelligence’ of candidates.Footnote 52
Although it took a particular form for the surgeons of the beginning of the twentieth century, a concern with character and integrity was evidently not novel in the medical community. As the historian Christopher Lawrence has shown, for an elite group of British physicians in the second half of the nineteenth century, ‘only the gentleman, broadly educated, and soundly read in the classics, could be equipped for the practice of medicine. The equation almost ran: perfect gentlemen alone made great clinicians.’Footnote 53 These physicians believed that “‘character” might matter as much in medicine as it did in the Church’.Footnote 54 Character, in this instance, was linked to a particular kind of gentlemanly culture.Footnote 55 Across the Atlantic, as John Harley Warner has shown, an ideal of science in the medicine of the second half of the nineteenth century reordered the professional identity of doctors and ‘bound together questions of medical epistemology with those of integrity’.Footnote 56 In the 1880s, some physicians challenged the AMA code of ethics because they believed science to be the ultimate arbiter of correct conduct – no codes of ethics were needed, in these doctors’ opinion, to prohibit consultation with non-orthodox doctors such as homeopaths – while those who upheld the old code disagreed that science could fulfil this role.Footnote 57
Some early twentieth-century surgeons did not believe that education, surgical skill and science would necessarily guarantee proper surgical conduct; testimony from trustworthy peers was also necessary in order to assess the character of the surgeon. In fact, as the ACS presidents’ speeches indicate, skill could actually be a liability. This belief was partly informed by the particular pitfalls that surgery was seen to engender: unnecessary operations and desire for fame and fortune. For this reason, the historically contingent relationship between character, professional identity, and medical practice found a particular expression among the first generation of neurosurgeons, some of whom were deeply involved with the ACS and who reflected and attempted to shape its organisational concerns. One of these concerns – which had a direct bearing on the moral pitfalls mentioned above – was the surgeon’s relationship with the lay press.
Cushing was elected president of the ACS in 1922, and although he first rejected the appointment, he eventually relented.Footnote 58 As the historian Michael Bliss has noted, one of Cushing’s objections had been precisely the fact that the press was allowed to cover the surgical clinics that were part of the Congress meetings.Footnote 59 Cushing wrote to the founder of the College that ‘[o]ne of the very great, if not the greatest, evil that I see in connection with the College is its publicity, and at the time of the meetings what I regard the exploitation of patients on the part of many members of the College as a part of this publicity. It was to me the greatest evil of the original Congress of Surgeons, as great an evil, indeed, as that of fee-splitting.’Footnote 60 Cushing’s position reflected not only a concern for the patients. He noted that although the publications of the clinics were censored when the Congress had met in Boston, ‘the papers were full … of reports which were damaging to the profession as a whole and to individual members of the profession. I was myself victimized … some years ago, after giving a simple clinic’.Footnote 61
In his presidential address, Cushing argued that because ‘surgery has become the chief therapeutic resource of the profession,’ it lent itself to ‘commercializing opportunities and temptations’.Footnote 62 He declared that ‘an objectionable degree of publicity has been a distinct evil of former meetings of the Congress’, and he drew a direct parallel between the moral qualities of a surgeon, his surgical skill, and his desire for publicity: ‘As a rule, the better the surgeon the more unassuming he is and the more he abhors seeing reference to his work in the lay press. Certainly the College cannot wish to foster the mere spectacularization of surgery, so prevalent in days gone by.’Footnote 63 A few years later, he told the Boston Globe that ‘a doctor should keep his name out of the newspapers and remain unequivocably [sic] above any possible suggestion of lending himself to … publicity’.Footnote 64
While the AMA had retained its prohibition of advertising in the wake of the late nineteenth-century contentious debates about its code of ethics, the ACS was in a more complicated position as far as the press was concerned, since public education was one of its mandates. The AMA actually attacked the College for its involvement with the public and sought to punish those who courted too much attention. Loyal Davis, a second-generation neurosurgeon, wrote in his history of the ACS that ‘[John B.] Murphy [1857–1916] of Chicago and [John B.] Deaver [1855–1931] of Philadelphia, both with strong, forceful personalities and a flair for the dramatic, were called “publicity seekers”’. They were stimulating, experienced teachers and their clinics were the most popular’.Footnote 65 Murphy, a past AMA president, was disciplined for advertising by the AMA’s Judicial Council in 1916.Footnote 66
The engagement of surgeons in public spectacles has a long history.Footnote 67 As late as the second half of the nineteenth century grand amphitheatres with ample seating for both students and visitors were still being built, but a change occurred in the early twentieth century when, gradually, surgical operating rooms became smaller and were not designed to accommodate a large number of spectators.Footnote 68 Along with the spaces, the performances changed. As Thomas Schlich shows, the ideals that defined the practice of surgery underwent a generational shift: if in the 1880s the spectacular individual performances of celebrated pioneers epitomised the best in surgery,Footnote 69 over the following decades surgery began to be conceived in a more communitarian way that emphasised standardised and teachable routines and techniques.Footnote 70
For Cushing, the engagement of surgeons with the press seemed to evoke the public spectacle of surgery’s past, the spectre of quackery, and the general moral failure of vanity. He was advocating a movement away from large audiences, not only public but also professional ones. In his presidential talk, apart from decrying the evils of engaging with the press, he highlighted the ‘temptations’ and ‘distractions’ that might cause a surgeon to make serious mistakes when he was in charge of ‘the entertainment of, and provision for, a large number of guests’.Footnote 71 Surgical demonstrations during the well-attended Congress meetings were thus not profitable:
There is no doubt but that one craftsman profits by seeing another craftsman at work, but if a few hundred artists should stand at the elbow of Mr John Sargent while he is in the process of painting a portrait, it would in all likelihood so modify his customary performance that the sitter might with very good reason be dissatisfied with what may be spoken of in surgical parlance as the end-result. There is unquestionably a great deal of artistry about a well-conducted operation, but surely as surgeons we are not content to be mere manipulators and piece-workers – more interested in the technique than in the portrait. The important thing in surgery is not operative dexterity but what the patient looks like after you and I have removed our gloves, and what he is subsequently able to do with what we have left of him.Footnote 72
But while large audiences were to be discouraged for these reasons, the small, select audience of hand-picked colleagues was essential for the progress of surgery, and this was precisely the kind of society of neurological surgeons that Cushing was organising and which was closed to morally suspicious surgeons like Sharpe. The moral anxiety over the spectacularisation of surgery was thus operating on multiple fronts: it signified an engagement with the public by means of the press, but it also structured the professional arena of the operating room. Here too the neurosurgeons’ concern with the character of the skilful but ambitious surgeon of questionable character found a particular expression in a disapproval of spectacular performances and pitted flashy operative dexterity against surgical judgement.
3. Self-Control in the Surgical Theatre
Cushing articulated the potentially problematic relationship between skill and judgement in a 1920 address to the Cleveland Academy of Medicine, in which he explained the principles of brain surgery. He argued that the most dangerous surgeons were not those with mediocre skill – the ‘somewhat awkward craftsmen’ – but rather those ‘whose operative technic exceeds their judgment as to when it should be put to use’.Footnote 73 Cushing envisioned the operation as a theatrical performance:
The patient, unfortunately, though he pays admission, has not the privilege of viewing the performance, else he might like to see his appendix removed with a flourish, and to applause. His active interest begins when the curtain falls and he is then apt to find himself more comfortable if the audience thought it a tedious and dull show.Footnote 74
In Cushing’s vision the best brain surgeon had to aspire to put on ‘a tedious and dull show’ in the operating room, a slow and careful performance whose aim was to lead to the best result for the patient rather than to a dazzling show that nourished the surgeon’s vanity. Skill, if corrupted by vanity, could, in fact, become a liability. Thus for Cushing, the surgeon’s work – an alchemy of judgement, knowledge, and skill – had this crucial moral dimension that rested on the character of the surgeon, who had to refrain from spectacular performances not only on the public stage, but also in the operating room. By rejecting those like Sharpe who were judged to fall short on this metric, the founders of the society implicitly sanctioned a particular moral economy for the specialty. Although Cushing’s initial defence of surgical specialisation was inflected by a belief that one day specialties would return to general medicine,Footnote 75 as a professional body the society became extremely important in the specialty’s development and organisation, and it was soon evident that neurosurgery would enjoy a secure position as a medical specialty.Footnote 76
Cushing and Sachs had vetted nine surgeons, and they first met on 19 March 1920 in Boston at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Other such travelling surgical clubs existed (Cushing himself had been part of a travelling general surgery society), and while more work needs to be done to understand the history, culture and function of these clubs, it is clear that their existence represented an acknowledgement that, as the historian Sally Wilde has put it, ‘not everything necessary for the successful performance of a procedure could be specified in a written text’.Footnote 77 Cushing’s and Sachs’ plan to establish a society for neurosurgeons was a reflection of this wider trend in the culture of early twentieth-century surgery, embodying in part an expression of these surgeons’ belief in the importance of tacit knowledge in surgical training and practice. The first draft of the constitution of the society specified that ‘formal papers or written communications are to be discouraged’.Footnote 78
Surgical clinics were the main focus of the SNS meetings, which opened with the host neurosurgeon performing an operation in the presence of his guests. These performances, followed by extensive discussions, were designed to negotiate particular norms, to standardise surgical procedures, and to demonstrate the skill and judgement of the neurosurgeon. In the second meeting, for instance, Cushing demonstrated an experimental technique – a transsphenoidal sella decompression.Footnote 79 The secretary noted that ‘[f]ollowing the operation the merits of the intracranial approach and the transphenoidal [sic] route were discussed’.Footnote 80 At the second meeting there was a heated debate about the proper technique and the merits of ventriculography, a new diagnostic procedure based on X-rays,Footnote 81 and at the June 1931 meeting, C.C. Coleman performed a surgical procedure he had devised for Ménière’s disease in which the eighth cranial nerve was cut.Footnote 82
The discussions following the surgical demonstrations allowed the neurosurgeons to create a common repertoire of therapeutic procedures as well as to standardise both the techniques and the instruments.Footnote 83 In the third meeting, following an operation at the University Hospital in Philadelphia, Francis Grant led the surgeons into a discussion about atypical trigeminal neuralgia and the ‘standardization of technic of alcohol injections’.Footnote 84 At the same meeting, there were demonstrations followed by a long debate about treating brain tumours with radium, which led to the consensus that ‘as yet nothing positive could be stated as to the effect of radium’, since a conclusion was made difficult by the impossibility of telling ‘how much the relief of symptoms may be attributed to the decompression and how much to the radium therapy’.Footnote 85
Cushing had noted that ‘[t]hey are ticklish performances, these operations for tumor, and demand not only a rigorous regard for detail, such as the patient’s position on the table and the choice of anesthetic … but also a thorough knowledge of the diverse tricks of controlling hemorrhage from scalp, meninges and brain’.Footnote 86 Even the seemingly straightforward task of using a Gigli saw could be tricky, since the instrument could get caught in the dura.Footnote 87 ‘Tricks’ like these were traded and negotiated in the professional meetings that set the stage for surgical performances. It was here that certain routines, technical values and procedures, technologies, habits of mind and body became sanctioned while others were discouraged.
Historians of surgery drawing on the work of Michel Foucault have emphasised the technologies of control that came into play in the operating room towards the end of the nineteenth century. The architecture of surgical theatres changed as surgeons demanded more control over the environment as well as the body of the patient through technologies such as anaesthesia or asepsis.Footnote 88 But there was also another type of control that has been emphasised less – the surgeon’s control over his own body and gestures, the role this control played in the formation of a collective surgical identity, and the technologies that made it possible.Footnote 89 The surgical performances that neurosurgeons put on for each other fulfilled this crucial role by legitimating particular communal habits of the body,Footnote 90 and it can be useful to think of these performances as a kind of technology of the self – a technology that helped the neurosurgeon effect a change on the individual self in such a way as to help align him to a community.Footnote 91 Historians have highlighted both the importance of shared cultural practices and spaces in the creation of a collective identity,Footnote 92 as well as the fact that personal identity cannot be made without the cooperation of others.Footnote 93 The neurosurgeons’ surgical performances in front of a select audience were a means through which they affirmed interest in a shared practice and sought to align their self to that of the entire specialist group.Footnote 94
For the first generation of neurosurgeons, these communally sanctioned surgical techniques were underwritten by moral values such as self-control. During the first meeting of the society, Sachs noted that ‘Dr Cushing started a temporal lobe case which we had seen the day before. The anesthetic was taken badly, so he removed fluid from the hernia, but then postponed the operation, not thinking it wise to go on.’Footnote 95 Sachs thought Cushing’s decision not to operate ‘was a hard decision to make, but it made a profound impression upon me and, I am sure, upon the others. It seemed to me to show superlative judgment and self-control.’Footnote 96
Self-control meant the ability of the surgeon to suppress his emotions as well as his impulses, and it could be observed most clearly in action in the operating room. Reflecting on the establishment of the specialty board that began to certify neurosurgeons in the 1940s, Sachs made explicit the importance that early neurosurgeons attached both to self-control and to the ability of the community to watch the prospective member in order to determine if the surgeon possessed the proper technique, judgement and character. He decried the suggestion that this examination not be oral because observing a surgeon’s reaction to a problem ‘gave me a reasonably good idea of his ability to cope with a given situation. On the other hand, some men become speechless in an oral examination; yet is this not in itself significant? One wonders how such a man would react when faced with an emergency at the operating table.’Footnote 97
An emphasis on self-control translated into a particular kind of neurosurgical practice – conservative, careful, painstaking, slow, fastidious, tedious, dull – all descriptors that the first generation of neurosurgeons used to characterise their ‘technic’. This kind of surgery, its proponents argued, was different from the quick, bloody surgery of the end of the nineteenth century.Footnote 98 A quiet performance was also often part of the new neurosurgery – speech was strictly suppressed in Cushing’s operating room.Footnote 99 A former resident described the routine pantomime in the surgical theatre: ‘Cushing’s operating room was a silent place. He used a set of hand signals to indicate the instrument he wanted, the thumb and forefinger pinched for a scalpel, an open palm with a twist of the wrist for the needle holder, rapid motion of two fingers for scissors, and so forth’.Footnote 100 Certainly, this kind of slow, careful surgery did not originate with Cushing himself, nor was it limited to neurosurgery. William Stewart Halsted, under whom Cushing trained, had endorsed similar techniques in the late nineteenth century, and the entire Hopkins school of surgery relied on this approach.Footnote 101 Some European surgeons had adopted similar practices. When Halsted visited Kocher in 1899, he was pleased to remark on the similarities between their techniques.Footnote 102 Such slow, exacting practices had been made possible by new technologies such as anaesthesia and asepsis, and, for neurosurgery, Cushing’s silver clips (which allowed the surgeon to stem blood loss) and the charting of blood pressure during the surgical procedure (which constituted a way of monitoring intracranial pressure) Nevertheless, despite the fact that many of these techniques were practised more widely by elite surgeons from the end of the nineteenth century, an attention to detail, a slow meticulous surgery, an intolerance of both blood loss and the sacrifice of healthy tissue and the prescribed steps to open and close the skull became known as ‘the Cushing ritual’, or, as one of his students had described it, ‘the fastidious ritual of the Cushing school’.Footnote 103 On this point neurosurgery was special, because, Cushing had argued, there was ‘no field of surgery in which fastidiousness is more essential to success’.Footnote 104
4. Conclusion
The meetings of the first neurosurgical society staged a critical encounter between the host neurosurgeon and the society’s members and guests who watched him perform surgery. These technical performances in the operating theatre, followed by discussions, were designed equally to encourage particular norms, to negotiate surgical knowledge, and to demonstrate the skills and character of the neurosurgeon. The performances acted as a technology of the self that at once aligned the operator to a community and helped that community refine its norms of surgical conduct. In less than a decade these men spoke confidently for the new specialty; no outsider could compete. Sharpe himself was taught this lesson when a scathing anonymous reviewer of his 1928 book Neurosurgery: Principles, Diagnosis and Treatment declared that ‘the surgical course advocated and the measures indicated are not in accord with the procedure of the leading neurologic surgeons of this country’.Footnote 105
The founding members of the society had sought a small group of elite surgeons with superior professional and moral qualities. Their concern about the skilful but ambitious surgeon of questionable character developed in a context in which many North American surgeons worried about unethical behaviour, from fee-splitting to the performance of unnecessary operations. As the presidents of the ACS (Cushing among them) had argued, the community had to be vigilant about the character of its members because too often the objectionable surgeon was ‘disguised in our own garb’.Footnote 106 Surgical skill, if not balanced by judgement, and in conjunction with vanity, ambition, or a commercialising impulse, could be very dangerous. When Cushing and Sachs objected to Sharpe’s flair for the dramatic and the appearance that he was courting the press, they were doing so out of a moral anxiety over the spectacularisation of surgery, which could manifest on two different fronts: in the public arena through advertising or the public intimation of radical cures, as well as in the operating room through flashy surgical performances calibrated to showcase skill and dexterity and to stoke the vanity of the operator. For the first generation of neurosurgeons similar moral values, such as self-control, underlined both the embrace of a conservative surgery and a distrust of publicity.
This case study illustrates the historically contingent connection between surgical skill and professional judgement, a relationship that reflects the broader concerns that animate the medical community at a given time. In the first decades of the twentieth century, a group of elite surgeons saw skill as a desirable but potentially problematic attribute that had to be kept in check. The first generation of neurosurgeons believed that an awkward surgeon with inferior technical ability was preferable to the brilliant and vain operator who lacked the capacity to judge when he should not call on his spectacular skills.