Book contents
- Literature and Medicine
- Literature and Medicine
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Epistemologies
- Chapter 1 Writing Realism in Nineteenth-Century British Literature and Medicine
- Chapter 2 ‘Dissecting Piece by Piece’
- Chapter 3 Exhibiting Bodies
- Chapter 4 Anatomical Culture, Body-Snatching, and Nineteenth-Century Gothic
- Part II Professionalisation
- Part III Responses
- Index
Chapter 4 - Anatomical Culture, Body-Snatching, and Nineteenth-Century Gothic
from Part I - Epistemologies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 June 2021
- Literature and Medicine
- Literature and Medicine
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Epistemologies
- Chapter 1 Writing Realism in Nineteenth-Century British Literature and Medicine
- Chapter 2 ‘Dissecting Piece by Piece’
- Chapter 3 Exhibiting Bodies
- Chapter 4 Anatomical Culture, Body-Snatching, and Nineteenth-Century Gothic
- Part II Professionalisation
- Part III Responses
- Index
Summary
In the nineteenth century the corpse became central to medical education. In Britain, a growing number of private medical schools opened throughout the country, involving the rise of the demand for dead bodies. It is exactly around the same time that Gothic fiction was revamped and offered insights into the debates around medical practice and education. This chapter explores the links between the field of anatomy and the development of Gothic fiction in Britain in the nineteenth century. It points out how the Gothic dealt with medical practitioners’ treatment of the corpse and how Gothic narratives dramatised the tension between the stealing, cutting up, preservation, and exhibition of human remains in medical collections and the central part played by anatomical knowledge in medical science. By looking at texts by John Galt, Mary Shelley, and Samuel Warren, as well as Wilkie Collins and Robert Louis Stevenson, this chapter not only shows how literary texts capitalised on the Gothic paraphernalia to foreground the regulation (or lack thereof) of the practice of anatomy before the passing of the 1832 Anatomy Act, but also highlights how the Gothic enabled authors to record cultural responses to medical practice throughout the century.
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- Literature and MedicineThe Nineteenth Century, pp. 74 - 94Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021