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Replicating bodies in nineteenth-century science and culture

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 21:20 authored by Will AbberleyWill Abberley
This issue of 19 on ‘Replicating Bodies’ explores how nineteenth-century culture constructed organic bodies (human and animal) as objects of replication and replicating machines in themselves. The articles collected here cover a wide range of subjects from taxidermy, medical anatomical models, and stage performance to psychological theories of imitation and uncanny doubles. The issue considers how representations of bodily replication interacted with wider concerns about authenticity, epistemology, identity, and animal/human, nature/culture binaries. Charles Dickens’s depictions of stuffed animals are shown to blur the lines between life and death, the organic and the artificial. Uncanny doublings in Gothic fiction and theatre are explored as vehicles for expressing pre-Freudian notions of an unconscious ‘haunting’ the human mind. Anatomical models from the period are shown to have both accurately reproduced human bodies and made them radically strange. We see how early medical photographs sought to not only replicate human bodies but freeze them in particular moments of disease and recovery. The body’s capacity for mimicry acquires a disturbing, revolutionary aspect in the discussion of Henry Crofton’s novel of a mischievous ventriloquist Valentine Vox. Further, efforts in the period to replicate non-European bodies on stage through various symbolic means demonstrate how bodies were not merely material objects but loci of shifting signs and interpretations.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century

Publisher

Birkbeck, University of London

Issue

24

Department affiliated with

  • English Publications

Notes

This is an edited special issue edited by Will Abberley

Full text available

  • No

Editors

Will Abberley

Legacy Posted Date

2020-06-29

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