Abstract
This article analyses the complex narrative of Harriet Cole, a 36-year-old African-American woman whose body was delivered to the anatomy department of Hahnemann Medical School in 1888. The anatomist Rufus B Weaver used her preserved remains to create a singular anatomical specimen, an intact extraction of the ‘cerebro-spinal nervous system’. Initially anonymised, deracialised and unsexed, the central nervous system specimen endured for decades before her identity as a working-class woman of colour was reunited with her remains. In the 1930s, media accounts began to circulate that Harriet Cole had bequeathed her remains to the anatomist, a claim that continues to circulate uncritically in the biomedical literature today. Although we conclude that this is likely a confabulation that erased the history of violence to her autonomy and her dead body, the rhetorical possibility that Harriet Cole might have chosen to donate her body to the medical school reflects the racial, political and legal dimensions that influenced how and why the story of Harriet Cole’s ‘gift’ served multiple purposes in the century and a half since her death.
Subject
Philosophy,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Reference100 articles.
1. Afro-American (Baltimore) . 1936. “Extraction of a Woman’s Nervous System Recalled by M.D.’s Death.” August 1, 1936, 16.
2. Alberti S . 2011. Morbid Curiosities: Medical Museums in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199584581.001.0001
3. Berry D. R . 2017. The Price for Their Pound of Flesh: The Value of the Enslaved, from Womb to Grave, in the Building of a Nation. Boston: Beacon Press.
4. Billings J. S . 1888. Medical Museums, With Special Reference to the Army Medical Museum at Washington. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor.
5. Blakely R. L. , and Harrington J. H. , eds. 1997. Bones in the Basement: Postmortem Racism in Nineteenth-Century Medical Training. Washington, D.C: Smithsonian Institution.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献