Article ID: CBB001214577

“Skinless Wonders”: Body Worlds and the Victorian Freak Show (2014)

unapi

In 2002, Gunther von Hagens's display of plastinated corpses opened in London. Although the public was fascinated by Body Worlds, the media largely castigated the exhibition by dismissing it as a resuscitated Victorian freak show. By using the freak show analogy, the British press expressed their moral objection to this type of bodily display. But Body Worlds and nineteenth-century displays of human anomalies were linked in more complex and telling ways as both attempted to be simultaneously entertaining and educational. This essay argues that these forms of corporeal exhibitionism are both examples of the dynamic relationship between the popular and professional cultures of the body that we often erroneously think of as separate and discrete. By reading Body Worlds against the Victorian freak show, I seek to generate a fuller understanding of the historical and enduring relationship between exhibitionary culture and the discourses of science, and thus to argue that the scientific and the spectacular have been, and clearly continue to be, symbiotic modes of generating bodily knowledge.

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Authors & Contributors
Sullivan, Jill A.
Plunkett, John
Lightman, Bernard V.
Kember, Joe
Hoffenberg, Peter H.
Dulce da Rocha Gonçalves
Journals
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
Victorian Literature and Culture
Public Understanding of Science
HOST: Journal of History of Science and Technology
British Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Pickering & Chatto
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Minnesota Press
University of Chicago Press
University of California Press
Routledge
Concepts
Exhibitions and fairs
Science and society
Science and culture
Popularization
Human body
Science and entertainment; science and spectacle
People
Galton, Francis
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
18th century
Places
Great Britain
Barcelona (Spain)
Manchester (England)
Netherlands
Spain
Australia
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