Article ID: CBB000932555

Vital Spots, Mortal Wounds, and Forensic Practice: Finding Cause of Death in Nineteenth-Century China (2009)

unapi

\The Qing inquest was one function of the bureaucracy which administered justice throughout the empire. Concern over integrity of this component of judicial process fuelled development of standardized techniques to ensure quality of forensic determinations. A key method for determining cause of death was use of knowledge of parts of the body for which trauma could be fatal---the so-called vital spots. This way of conceptualizing wounds formed part of a basic rubric which officials used to determine the mortal wound and assign legal responsibility in homicide cases. This article uses a nineteenth-century homicide case drawn from Yilibu's Elementary Models for Studying Cases (1838) to examine the observational and analytical procedures used in inquests to transform effects of violence on a body into evidence for adjudication. Not only did these techniques reinforce relationships of power within the bureaucracy but they also reflect the extent to which Qing forensic knowledge was conceptually, institutionally, and procedurally inseparable from judicial process and codified law.

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Authors & Contributors
Scheid, Volker
Alibrandi, Rosamaria
Chiang, Chu-Shan
Janssen, Diederik F.
Pearson, Quentin A. , III
Wu, Yi-Li
Journals
Late Imperial China
Zhongguo Keji Shiliao (China Historical Materials of Science and Technology)
Vesalius
Taiwanese Journal for Studies of Science, Technology, and Medicine
Journal of the History of Dentistry
History of Psychiatry
Publishers
Bonanno Editore
Zhejian University Press
University of Wisconsin at Madison
University of New Hampshire
Springer
Peter Lang
Concepts
Medicine
Medicine and law
Forensic medicine
Human body
Trials (law)
Autopsy
People
Song, Ci
Okata Kousyo
Ingrassia, Giovanni Filippo
Time Periods
19th century
Qing dynasty (China, 1644-1912)
18th century
20th century, early
20th century
17th century
Places
China
United States
Japan
Thailand
Boston (Massachusetts, U.S.)
Spain
Institutions
Harvard University
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