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E-raamat: Doctor Dissected: A Cultural Autopsy of the Burke and Hare Murders

(Professor of English, University of Wyoming)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199910311
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780199910311

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A series of bizarre disappearances filled the citizens of early nineteenth-century Scotland with terror. When the perpetrators were finally apprehended in 1828, their motive roiled the nation: William Burke and William Hare had murdered for profit. The cadavers supplied a ready payout, courtesy of Dr. Robert Knox, who was desperate for anatomical subjects. Nearly two hundred years later, these scandalous murders continue to fire imagination in Scotland and beyond.

From the start, the sensational events provoked artists and writers. While Sir Walter Scott resisted public comment, his correspondence gives his trenchant private opinion and shows him working busily behind the scenes and against the doctor. Many more mined the news outright. Serial novelist David Pae exploited the disturbance to lobby for religious belief in an increasingly secular world. A subsequent generation resurrected the grisly drama as fodder for the Victorian gothic-the murders figure prominently in Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Body Snatcher" and, more obliquely, in Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The twentieth century saw the specters of Burke and Hare emerge in James Bridie's play The Anatomist, Hollywood horror films, television programs like Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Frankensteinian retellings from Alasdair Gray. In this century, the story has been picked up by Smallville and Doctor Who. Recent allusions and reenactments range from the somber-in popular detective fiction by Ian Rankin-to the dark, camp comedy of Fringe Festival performances and the slapstick of John Landis's Burke and Hare.

Featuring over thirty images and canvassing a wide range of media-from contemporary newspaper accounts and private correspondence to Japanese comic books and videogames-The Doctor Dissected analyzes the afterlife of this national trauma and considers its singular place in Scottish history.

Arvustused

Professor McCracken-Flesher is one of the most ingenious - and readable - academics working in the field of Scottish culture, and this volume... shows her skill at teasing out a story and its implications to its best advantage. * Stuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday *

Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xiii
1 Medicine, Murder, and Scottish Story: Doctor Knox and Burke and Hare
3(25)
2 The Story Begins: The Law versus the Press, and the Doctor versus Walter Scott
28(28)
3 Enlightened System versus Religious Sympathy: The Sensational Tales of Alexander Leighton and David Pae
56(33)
4 Dissecting the Doctor: Mr. Jekyll, Dr. Hyde, and Robert Knox
89(29)
5 Anatomizing the Audience: James Bridie, Melodrama, and the Movies
118(37)
6 Bringing Out the Dead: Silent Victims Speak in Alasdair Gray's Poor Things
155(38)
7 Resting in Pieces? Present Comforts or Restless Futures in Ian Rankin's Scotland
193(40)
Notes 233(10)
Bibliography 243(20)
Index 263
Caroline McCracken-Flesher is Professor of English at the University of Wyoming. She is the author of Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow (Oxford University Press, 2005) and the editor of Culture, Nation, and the New Scottish Parliament (Bucknell UP, 2007).