The Performative Corpse: Anatomy Theatres from the Medieval Era to the Virtual Age examines the various ways in which the human corpse has been displayed, dissected, and consumed by and for a public audience. To date, performative moments of human dissection have received little scholarly attention beyond work done on the anatomical theatres of the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries, in which criminal or unclaimed bodies were dissected for the edification of the academic community and the general public. Traditionally, the events of the anatomical theatre have been framed in Foucaudian terms: developing a hierarchical relationship of power between medico-judicial authority and the dissected body, which is objectified and commoditized. Wh...
AbstractThe image of the human corpse throughout its post-mortem decomposition has become part of th...
Post-mortems may have become a staple of our TV viewing, but the long history of this practice is st...
Between 1500 and 1750 cadavers were frequently dissected for a variety of reasons, including to find...
The Performative Corpse: Anatomy Theatres from the Medieval Era to the Virtual Age examines the vari...
Imagine a performance event somewhere between an academic lecture and cabaret. A mute corpse in an e...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
The object of the present paper is anatomical dissection and its role in changing the perception of ...
"Imagine a performance event somewhere between an academic lecture and cabaret. A mute corpse in an ...
At the beginning of Wattle and Daub’s 2015 puppet opera The Depraved Appetite of Tarrare the Freak, ...
Every time von Hagens' plastinated bodies are exposed, they cause polemics, controversies and an ine...
This open access book is the culmination of many years of research on what happened to the bodies of...
The practice of dissection is culturally marked by facts, gestures, and temporalities closely relate...
This thesis examines artistic representations of the dissected and dismembered female body that emer...
Obra ressenyada: Tinne CLAES, Corpses in Belgian Anatomy, 1860-1914. Nobody's Dead. London: Palgrave...
The practice of dissection is culturally marked by facts, gestures, and temporalities closely relate...
AbstractThe image of the human corpse throughout its post-mortem decomposition has become part of th...
Post-mortems may have become a staple of our TV viewing, but the long history of this practice is st...
Between 1500 and 1750 cadavers were frequently dissected for a variety of reasons, including to find...
The Performative Corpse: Anatomy Theatres from the Medieval Era to the Virtual Age examines the vari...
Imagine a performance event somewhere between an academic lecture and cabaret. A mute corpse in an e...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
The object of the present paper is anatomical dissection and its role in changing the perception of ...
"Imagine a performance event somewhere between an academic lecture and cabaret. A mute corpse in an ...
At the beginning of Wattle and Daub’s 2015 puppet opera The Depraved Appetite of Tarrare the Freak, ...
Every time von Hagens' plastinated bodies are exposed, they cause polemics, controversies and an ine...
This open access book is the culmination of many years of research on what happened to the bodies of...
The practice of dissection is culturally marked by facts, gestures, and temporalities closely relate...
This thesis examines artistic representations of the dissected and dismembered female body that emer...
Obra ressenyada: Tinne CLAES, Corpses in Belgian Anatomy, 1860-1914. Nobody's Dead. London: Palgrave...
The practice of dissection is culturally marked by facts, gestures, and temporalities closely relate...
AbstractThe image of the human corpse throughout its post-mortem decomposition has become part of th...
Post-mortems may have become a staple of our TV viewing, but the long history of this practice is st...
Between 1500 and 1750 cadavers were frequently dissected for a variety of reasons, including to find...