Dead Bodies On Display Museum Ethics in PDF
Dead Bodies On Display Museum Ethics in PDF
Dead Bodies On Display Museum Ethics in PDF
Masaki Komori*
* ᑠ᳃ࠉ┿ᶞࠉJunior Fellow of the Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and
Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Tokyo, Japan.
49
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Introduction
That is also because this field of study questions how humans think they
should be. For example, previous literature on exhibiting humans discusses
various ethical grounds, including racial issues at human zoos from the
7
perspectives of post-colonial studies. This case study raised the question
of what the “human being” was, and of scrutinizing how its category was
socially constructed in the early twentieth century. In other words, it exposed
the historical structure that can give a clue as to the “ethics” of the time
period.
On the other hand, my study of the Mütter Museum, based on
discussions regarding the studies of human exhibitions, analyzes how
humans have been involved with cadavers, because I aim to consider present-
day museum ethics. The most famous case that discusses the ethics of
exhibiting human bodies is probably Body Worlds by the German medical
doctor Gunther von Hagens. Other scholars, who have discussed the ethics
8
of displaying human remains, have been attracted to this controversial case.
The exhibitions, which showed human remains fixed and posed by a newly
invented medical scientific method of display, originally began as a purely
academic interest. Hagens patented this method as “plastination.” After
the first exhibition of his plastinated bodies in Japan, he started a series of
human body exhibitions named Body Worlds in several countries including
Germany, Austria, the United Kingdom, the United States, Japan, and China.
After proving popular in the 2000s, Body Worlds became harshly criticized,
9
introducing controversial issues into the discourse of medical ethics.
While the exhibitions attracted a big market and it was claimed that
they embraced educational and scientific values, they were later charged for
human trafficking. Since the early 2010s, scholars have actively published
studies of Body Worlds, at a time when social concerns about this issue
were rising. Among the various analyses of these exhibitions, from freak
show aesthetics to the ethics of posing cadavers, I would like to adapt
Peter McIsaac’s analysis of science narrative for justification. He analyzed
discourses on the exhibitions in Germany from 1996 through 2004. He
worried about the affirmative gesture seen in the narratives of the “democratic
values” of scientific knowledge, which is a label and statement as “science”
to legitimize the universal value of something to share it among the public.
Body Worlds’ promoters often use this narrative to try to encourage visitors to
10
consume these controversial and sometimes rather uncomfortable exhibitions.
52
Masaki Komori
53
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
The Mütter Museum was originally the medical collection of Dr. Thomas
Dent Mütter, a medical doctor born in Richmond, Virginia, who contributed
to the great advancement of American surgery in the nineteenth century. The
museum was founded by the first medical association for mutual-aid among
physicians, the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, in 1858. Dr. Mütter
had collected a wide-range of medical specimens and equipment throughout
his life within and outside the United States and donated his collection of
over 1,700 items to the association (see Figures 1 and 2). The collections’
original purpose was to gather, share, and provide medical specimens and
equipment for the college members. In other words, in the early stage of its
history, the purpose of the collection was to be used for research and training
for physicians and medical students, or for the “scientific expert” at that
time. After this collection
was converted into the form
of a “museum,” the members
discussed making the collection
open to the public. In the
late nineteenth century, it was
extremely rare for a medical
museum to permit the public
to use its collection. The
Mütter Museum was thus the
pioneer of the open-to-public
medical museum in the United
12
States. In her influential
volume Civilizing Rituals,
cultural and art historian
Carol Duncan argued that
American museums functioned
as “civilizing” apparatuses in
13
the late nineteenth century.
Figure 1 :Entrance of Mütter Museum. The sign with Americans were civilized
catchphrase of “Disturbingly Informative” put on the through the early art museums
wall. (Photographed by author, August 2016) such as the Metropolitan
54
Masaki Komori
Museum of Art. Around the same time, the Mütter Museum, which made its
collection open to the public, became an educational facility to civilize the
American citizen.
In principle at least, the Mütter Museum was open to the public. It aimed
to educate the public to make them “good” American citizens; however,
this aim seems to have not been achieved directly. Almost all visitors from
the earlier time through approximately the late 1960s were actually science
experts. They were physicians, nurses, and students of medical schools.
According to a report in 1945 by Ella N. Wade, one of the major curators
of the Mütter Museum during 1932-1957, few non-medical professionals
14
visited the museum until 1945. She guessed this unpopularity partly was
due to the complicated process of paperwork to access the gallery.
Unfortunately, the collection at the Mütter Museum retains only a few
records of its visitors and some of them are incomplete. Materials on the
qualitative change among visitors are limited. Detailed descriptions of
visitors in the 1950s and 1960s and of the museum’s response to them are
not in the collection; however, we at least know that the visitors’ occupations
had changed by approximately
1970. According to an article in
the Philadelphia Magazine in 1969
and the annual official report of
the museum in 1970, there was an
increasing number of new kinds
of visitors such as factory workers
or salespersons, who differed from
the previous main targets, scientific
15
experts. The first turning point
took place during the middle of
the 1970s. There were financial
Figure 2 :Portrait of Dr. Thomas Dent Mütter, problems, and the need to increase
drawn by Samuel Huntington. (Julie Berkowitz
attendance made the museum and
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
Portrait Catalogue 1984, 142) the committee members begin to
55
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
“[T]o show advances made by medicine which have improved the health and
18
well-being of the American citizen over the past 200 years.” This reform
was marked as the official turning point of the shift from within the museum.
It functioned as the motive force to make the shift from providing scientific
knowledge for medical experts to educating the general public as the “health
and well-being of the American citizen.”
As shown in Bennet’s discussion of the “exhibitionary complex,” the
Mütter Museum, like other influential modern museums, has functioned as
a place that reinforces the visitors’ national identity, being the “birthplace
of American Medicine.” Additionally, as Macdonald pointed out in science
museums’ shift since the 1960s, it was part of consumer culture as a tourist
spot. In this sense, the Mütter Museum traces the history of the atypical
“museum” since the modern age. In other words, it is a highly authentic
modern museum. This led to the museum identifying itself as a “one and
only” museum, different from other museums showing human remains.
20
cabinets, and carpets (see Figures 4 and 5).
After the implementation of this principle and the subsequent renovation
plan driven by Bicentennial tourism, the museum director, curator and
committee members discussed the re-purposing of the museum. In 1979,
they stated:
One might think from these statements that the museum at the time did
not abandon the role of a highly specialized medical museum. Rather, the
officials began to claim the role and uniqueness of the museum as being both
the “traditional” and “historic” in contemporary America. In this statement,
they emphasized the dichotomous narratives of “changing needs and historic
collection,” “traditional and new,” and “medical community and general
public.” The invented narratives, which gave a new significance to the
museum, intended to revitalize the contemporary Philadelphia community
at a time when the number of visitors going to Philadelphia had begun to
increase. In the popularization of the Bicentennial tourism movement from
1974 to the early 1980s, this narrative marked the shift of the museum from a
22
specialized scientific facility only for experts into a venue of tourism. In the
context of tourism, as cultural studies scholar Pramod Nayar argued in noting
how cultures can obtain different meanings by ways of media representations,
which he calls “packaging,” this museum recaptured the package of “historic
and authorized medical museum” as well as keeping the old narrative of
23
technically innovated scientific facility.
58
Masaki Komori
Figures 4 and 5: Before(top) and after(bottom) the museum renovation in 1986. (College of
Physicians of Philadelphia, Images of America 2012, 33; Photographed by author, Jan. 2013)
59
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Figures 6 and 7: Museum’s centerpiece Hyrtl Skull Collection. Anne Svenson took its
photograph (Right), featured on the cover of the official catalog of the museum. (Left:
Photographed by author, Jan. 2013; Right: Worden, Mütter Museum, 2002)
60
Masaki Komori
Figure 8: William Wegman’s artwork proposed for the catalog after collaboration.
(“Bad Foot,” 2000)
Figure 9: Cookie cutter designed by and sold at the museum. A motif of Conjoined
Twin (well-known as Siamese twin) is famous as its iconic character. (Photographed
by author, August 2016)
61
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
series and the selling of goods supported the narrative of “better serve the
26
community and meet the old and changing needs of this historic collection.”
Anthropologist Noah Jones explored the dynamic, constructive
narrative-making process at the Mütter Museum, claiming that the actors
concerned with its narrative construction can be roughly divided into three
27
kinds: medical experts, tourists, and artists. As well as museum planning
on the inside, artists outside the museum took important parts in constructing
the narrative. Since the 1990s, the museum began to play a leading role in
co-hosting a series of exhibitions with artists. The museum not only invited
many artists to collaborate, but began to actively give special exhibits, which
28
aesthetically presented medical apparatuses and technologies. As well as
exhibiting artworks and medical collections, the museum adopted aesthetic
lighting and new ways of displays when it changed its permanent exhibition
(see Figure 10).
Comments on the objects by Worden reflect the museum’s policy of
collaborative work with artists. She notes in the forward section of the
museum’s official catalog, “While these bodies may be ugly, there is a
terrifying beauty in the spirits of those forced to endure these afflictions,”
Figure 10: “Artful Bones” at the Ossuary Exhibit, permanent exhibition displaying human bones
categorized and ordered by form. (Photographed by author, Jan. 2013)
62
Masaki Komori
and she gives readers a narrative that romanticizes human remains or other
29
objects concerning life and death. She knew romanticizing objects is the
most artful way of showing these “ugly” but curious objects to the public.
Many artists have so far been attracted by the museum and have created
30
various artworks and films in collaboration with it. The art exhibitions
continue to be held as a series of museum programs. This means that the
museum officially authorizes and utilizes these artworks as a means of
reform. In addition to physical renovation plans, the contents of the art
exhibition series support the reforms in order to popularize the museum and
to shift its role.
As a result of the reforms led by Worden within the context of the tourist
movement in Philadelphia in 1976, the narrative of the museum began to
change. The number of visitors did not grow immediately, however. It was
not until after the management reform of the middle 1990s, when attendance
at the museum drastically increased. However, while the museum gained
popularity, journalists and bioethics scholars sometimes criticized the
tourist spectacle of the museum. They claimed that the museum exploited
scientifically obsolete collections in an unethical way, for the purpose of
creating a kind of “freak show.”
As for the number of museum visitors, reform from 1992 through
1995 triggered an explosive increase. According to the plan documents
and reports of the reform called the Three-Year Plan, the Mütter Museum
introduced systems of third-party evaluation led by an institution specialized
31
in museum-evaluation. By using results of its marketing research and
consultation, Worden organized many exhibitions and developed public
relations campaigns, such as appearances on television, in general magazines
32
and newspapers, and at conferences, events and lectures. Meanwhile, along
with the executive director Marc Miccozi, she also developed the museum’s
architectural style by introducing plans for building renovation, with new
33
floor plans for the exhibition room.
These development projects resulted in boosting the attendance more
drastically. According to my research by calculating the transition from
63
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Table 1: Transition of the Attendance at the Mütter Museum. Calculated from official
records listed in the note 34. Missing years are due to partly absent records.
64
Masaki Komori
Soon after Worden’s death in the summer of 2004, National Public Radio
reported her accomplishments: “Worden turned the little-known medical
37
museum into a museum with a worldwide reputation.” In analyzing the
reforms that she made at the Mütter Museum, I have discussed the issue of
ethics regarding the exhibit of human bodies at the widely-known “scientific/
medical museum.” While the Mütter Museum gained in popularity, Worden
came to use the narrative of “authentic science museum.” This discourse
functions somehow as a defense against harsh ethical critiques of the
museum, but another type of interpretation of the museum by visitors actually
defused them at the same time, that is, the narrative of “medical oddities”
and “hall of horror,” which many visitors actually preferred. Contrary to the
intention of the museum, this “scientific authenticity” narrative ironically
functioned only as a justification for exhibiting human remains as a curiosity.
This ironical consequence is not only seen in the Mütter Museum’s case,
but is also situated in the history of science and museums. At the museum,
all the curious visitors can see the human remains shown on display. That
was supported and reasoned by the “open-to-public” principle and the
“scientific authenticity” narrative, and was driven by the Bicentennial
tourism. Furthermore, a terminological history of the definition of “freak
show” suggests another ironical consequence of the history of science. The
freak shows in America, which flourished then faded between about 1840 and
1940, descended from a tradition of the extraordinary body that can be traced
back to the earliest human representation. Mysterious and marvelous bodies
as seen in ancient paintings such as Stone Age cave drawings had been later
called “monsters” by the ancient Greek scientists. P. T. Barnum would name
them “freaks.” On the one hand, the Latin word monstra or monster also
means “sign” and forms the root of the modern English word demonstrate,
38
which means “to show.” In other words, “freak show” terminologically
66
Masaki Komori
connotes that freaks that have a certain sign different from others would
naturally be shown/demonstrated.
At a time when historically people’s curiosity was inspired by such
freaks and monsters, scientists pursued their own answers, highly motivated
by this curiosity as well as religious interests. Curiosity was the precursor
39
of science, and commerce was the precursor of capitalism. But from
around the eighteenth century onwards, science, which sought to classify
and master rather than revere freaks, began to satisfy people’s curiosity and
weaken the monsters’ power. Science helped the freak show to fade away;
however, when capitalism is growing, science revitalizes the “freak show”
and curiosity again in an ironical way: by building the narrative of “scientific
authenticity” and giving it to obsolete science through museums, not by using
scientific knowledge itself. Considering the second ironical result, or this
“rehabilitation” of science at museums under late capitalism, could give us
clues to thinking about this newly emerged ethical issue.
This rather sad scenario gives us a lesson in the ethics of displaying
human remains at museums and an idea for future studies. Whereas
museums provide a message of “education in scientific knowledge,”
visitors could “misread” it as mere “medical curiosity.” This process is
contextualized in museum communications: a serial process of sending,
40
distributing, and receiving. It is necessary to anticipate the distributions of
the meanings of an exhibit, which inevitably include possible unpredictable
readings by visitors. Especially if the museum deals with human bodies,
which are extraordinarily sensitive materials, exhibitors of a museum have to
contemplate the ethics from every possible angle and the responsibility for
their intentions being misread. As well as museum practitioners, museum
studies scholars must analyze not only the process of staging exhibitions but
also museum communications.
As a result of the reforms at the Mütter Museum, it successfully turned
human remains into forms of public curiosity in the age of tourism. In
response to the growth in the number of visitors since the museum began
targeting the general public, it has been modifying its principle, policy and
ethics on treating these sensitive objects. The first medical museum in the
United States illuminates the intersection between science history, consumer
culture, and the role of museums in modern society. The history of the
Mütter Museum offers a lesson in how museums can be conscious of the need
67
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Acknowledgement
This paper exists because of the efforts of others. The research was partially supported by the Uehiro
Foundation on Ethics and Education, the Konosuke Matsushita Memorial Foundation, the Suntory Foundation,
and the University of Tokyo. I thank our colleagues from the Temple University who provided insight and
expertise that greatly assisted the research, although they may not agree with all of the interpretations and
conclusions of this paper. Especially, I am indebted to and thank the Mütter Museum and professionals at the
museum.
Notes
1. “New museology” is a term used by the following museums scholars, which captures the trend of new
perspectives into museums. The term has been often used in discussions in the discipline of museum
studies particularly since the 1990s. Peter Vergo, ed., The New Museology (London: Reaktion Books,
1989); Bettina Messias Carbonell, Museum Studies: An Anthology of Contents (Oxford: Blackwell
Publishing, 2004); Janet Marstine, “Introduction,” in New Museum Theory and Practice, ed. Janet Marstine
(Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2006), 1-36; Sharon Macdonald, “Expanding Museum Studies: An
Introduction,” in A Companion to Museum Studies, ed. Sharon Macdonald (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing,
2006), 1-12.
2. Michel Foucault, Naissance de la Clinique: une archéologie du regard medical (Paris: PUF, 1963);
Foucault, Histoire de la sexualité Vol I-III: La Volonté de savor (Paris: Gallimard, 1976,1984).
3. Tony Bennett, “The Exhibitionary Complex,” New Formations 4 (Spring, 1988): 73-102.
4. Rosemarie Garland Thomson, Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture
and Literature (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997); Rachel Adams, Sideshow U.S.A.: Freaks
and the American Cultural Imagination (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001); James Gilbert,
Whose Fair? Experience, Memory, and the History of the Great St. Louis Exposition (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2009).
5. Janet Marstine, ed., Routledge Companion to Museum Ethics (London: Routledge, 2011); Alexander Bauer
et al, eds., New Direction in Museum Ethics (London: Routledge, 2012).
6. These volumes are exceptional and important studies on medical exhibitions/museums. Especially,
Redmans’ book also explored the earlier history of the Mütter Museum from the perspectives of collecting
objects at museums, whereas my paper would focus on the recent years of the Mütter’s history. Barbara
Maria Stafford, Body Criticism: Imaging the Unseen in Enlightenment Art and Medicine (Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 1991); Samuel J. M. M. Alberti, Morbid Curiosities: Medical Museums in Nineteenth
Century Britain (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011); Samuel J. Redman, Bone Rooms: From
Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016).
68
Masaki Komori
7. Phillips Verner Bradford, and Harvey Blume, Ota Benga: The Pigmy in the Zoo (New York: St. Martin’s
Press, 1992).
8. A series of the exhibition Body Worlds led by Gunther von Hagens has been investigated from several
perspectives as follows. Christine T. Jespersen, Alicita Rodriguez, and Joseph Starr, The Anatomy of “Body
Worlds”: Critical Essays on the Plastinated Cadavers of Gunther Von Hagens (Jefferson, NC: McFarland
& Co., Publishers, 2008); John D. Lantos, Controversial Bodies: Thoughts on the Public Display of
Plastinated Corpses (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011); Nadja Durbach, “‘Skinless
Wonders’: Body Worlds and the Victorian Freak Show,” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied
Science 69, no.1 (2012): 38-67.
9. In the United States, after controversies from various standpoints including religion and legal issues or
consent occurred, California Science Center set up an Ethical Commission in 2004. Neda Ulaby, “Origins
of Exhibited Cadavers Questioned,” NPR, published on August 11, 2006, accessed on July 20, 2016, http://
www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5637687; a news website Red Fox made by independent
journalist Fumita Iwaya detailed and globally collected an enormous amount of material concerning
Body Worlds, including published documents, news and comments on the website, and video and audio
materials. Fumita Iwaya, “‘Jintai no fushigi ten’ no shuryo to kokuhatsu (The End of ‘Body Worlds’
Exhibition and Accusation),” Red Fox, published on January 31, 2011, accessed on May 9, 2015, http://
redfox2667.blog111.fc2.com/blog-entry-249.html?sp.
10. Peter M. McIsaac, “Worrying About Democratic Values: Body Worlds in German Context, 1996-2004,” in
Museum and Difference, ed. Daniel J. Sherman (Blooomington: Indiana University Press, 2007), 181-94,
199-202.
11. Other historical researches on human remains or medical museums are the following. They are factual
researches, rather than studies posing substantial questions. Ken Arnold, Danielle Olsen and British
Museum, Medicine Man: Henry Wellcome's Phantom Museum (London: British Museum, 2003); Yuu
Kawai, Hakushin no kyochi: jitsubutsu dori ni chakushoku sareta toshindai no ningyo no rekishi, oubei hen
(Ground of Reality: A History of Life-Sized and True-To-Life-Colored Dolls in Euro-American Countries),
(Osaka: Fumiduki Sha, 2004).
12. Gretchen Worden, Mütter Museum: Of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia (New York: Blast Books,
2002), 4-5.
13. Carol Duncan, Civilizing Rituals: Inside Public Art Museums (London: Routledge, 1995), 47-71.
14. Ella N. Wade, “Visitors to the Mütter Museum,” Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of
Philadelphia, Fourth Series, no.12 (1945): 40-43; see also documents about the visitors listed in note 34.
15. Anonymus, “139 Heads are Better than One,” Philadelphia Magazine 60 (1969): 41; Fred B. Rogers,
“Annual Report of the Mütter Museum and College Collections,” Transactions and Studies of the College
of Physicians of Philadelphia, Fourth Series no.37 (1970): 336-38.
16. A catchphrase in the promotion for special event “Wistar at The Mütter Museum” on Wednesday,
November 15, 2017.
17. Philadelphia Convention and Tourist Bureau, 1974 Official Philadelphia Visitor and Convention Guide,
(Woodland Hills, CA: Visitor and Convention Publications, 1974).
18. College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “A Reform Plan, March 18, 1975,” Collection of Mütter Museum
Records, Box 23-Folder 5.
69
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
19. College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “Renovation Plans, 1971-1979, October 1977,” Collection of Mütter
Museum Records, Box 23-Folder 5.
20. Ibid.
21. College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “Renovation Plans, 1971-1979, March 1979,” Collection of Mütter
Museum Records, Box 23-Folder 5.
22. Andrew Feffer, “Show Down in Center City Staging Redevelopment and Citizenship in Bicentennial
Philadelphia, 1974-1977,” Journal of Urban History 30, no.6 (2004): 791-825; Elizabeth Grant, “Race and
Tourism in America’s First City,” Journal of Urban History 31, no.6 (2005): 850-71.
23. Pramod K. Nayar, Packaging Life: Cultures of the Everyday (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2009).
24. Laura Lindgren, an editor based in New York, completed many exhibitions at the Mütter Museum with
Gretchen Worden as her great partner. According to the list she kindly gave me during my email interview,
she worked on the following Mütter Museum exhibitions, which include several significant art exhibits
in the museum history: “Mütter Museum” (Book Trader, Philadelphia, November 19, 1993-January 9,
1994), “Of Science and Humanity: Treasures from the Mütter Museum” (Museum of Jurassic Technology,
Los Angeles, April-July 1994), “Beyond Ars Medica: Treasures from the Mütter Museum” (Thread
Waxing Space, New York City, November 1995-January 1996), “Photoanatomic” (Barrister’s Gallery,
New Orleans, Louisiana, December 2000), “Mütter Museum: Photographs” (Ricco/Maresca, New York
City, November-December 2002), “Mütter Museum: Photographs” (San Francisco Camera Works,
August-September 2003), “Extraordinary Bodies” (Eight traveling exhibitions, Appleton Museum of Art,
Mütter Museum et al, October 2, 2004 through December 28, 2009), “Anatomica Aesthetica” (Cleveland
Institute of Art, November 5, 2010-December 18, 2010; Mütter Museum, The College of Physicians of
Philadelphia, September 22, 2011-February 25, 2012). Laura Lindgren, email to author, January 5, 2017;
The most well-known publication edited by her is about the Mütter Museum’s medical photographs. Laura
Lindgren, Mütter Museum: Historic Medical Photographs (New York: Blast Books, 2007).
25. I already published an article analyzing the process of making the artistic value of collections focusing
on the Mütter Museum’s discourses, ‘ars medica’ exhibits at art museums, and academic theories like
visual culture. Masaki Komori “Geijutsuka suru igaku hakubutsukan: Firaderufia ishi kyoukai Mutaa
Hakubutsukan ni okeru kaikaku (‘Ars Medica’ Strategy at Medical Museum: Reforms since 1980s at
Mütter Museum in Philadelphia)” Tenjigaku 54, no.1 (2017): 62-71.
26. College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “Renovation Plans, 1971-1979, March 1979.”
27. Nora Jones, “The Mütter Museum: The Body as Spectacle, Specimen, and Art” (PhD diss., Temple
University, 2002), 1-45.
28. Barton Hirst et al, eds., Human Monstrosities (Philadelphia: Lea Brothers & Co, 1891-1893).
29. Gretchen Worden, Mütter Museum, 4.
30. For instance, stop-motion animator Brothers Quay used to live in Philadelphia as students at Philadelphia
College of Art (now, Academy of the Arts) and later they collaborated with the museum and shot the
documentary film, which beautifully captured the museum, its collections and staffs. Quay Brothers, dir.,
Through the Weeping Glass: On the Consolations of Life Everlasting–—Limbos & Afterbreezes in the
Mütter Museum, 2011 (London: British Film Institute, 2016).
31. College of Physicians of Philadelphia, “Governance Handbook, 1993-1995,” College of Physicians of
Philadelphia Executive Director Records, Box 44-Folder 4.
70
Masaki Komori
Bibliography
Primary sources
Anonymous. “139 Heads are Better than One.” Philadelphia Magazine 60 (1969): 41.
Anonymous. “A Needs Assessment Study, by Wallace, Roberts, and Todd, 1992.” College of Physicians of
Philadelphia Executive Director Records, Box 44-Folder 5.
Berkowitz, Julie. The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Portrait Catalogue. Philadelphia: College of
Physicians of Philadelphia, 1984.
College of Physicians of Philadelphia. “Annual Report of the Mütter Museum and College Collections.”
Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia (1959-2002).
———. “A Reform Plan, March 18, 1975.” Collection of Mütter Museum Records, Box 23-Folder 5.
71
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Secondary sources
Adams, Rachel. Sideshow U.S.A.: Freaks and the American Cultural Imagination. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2001.
Alberti, Samuel J. M. M. Morbid Curiosities: Medical Museums in Nineteenth Century Britain. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2011.
Arnold, Ken, Danielle Olsen, and British Museum. Medicine Man: Henry Wellcome's Phantom Museum.
London: British Museum, 2003.
72
Masaki Komori
Bauer, Alexander et al, eds. New Direction in Museum Ethics. London: Routledge, 2012.
Bennett, Tony. “The Exhibitinary Complex” New Formations 4 (Spring, 1988): 73-102.
Bradford, Phillips Verner, and Harvey Blume. Ota Benga: The Pigmy in the Zoo. New York: St. Martin’s Press,
1992.
Carbonell, Bettina Messias. Museum Studies: An Anthology of Contents. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004.
Duncan, Carol. Civilizing Rituals: Inside Public Art Museums. London: Routledge, 1995.
Durbach, Nadja. “‘Skinless Wonders’: Body Worlds and the Victorian Freak Show.” Journal of the History of
Medicine and Allied Science 69, no.1 (2012): 38-67.
Feffer, Andrew. “Show Down in Center City Staging Redevelopment and Citizenship in Bicentennial
Philadelphia, 1974-1977.” Journal of Urban History 30, no.6 (2004): 791-825.
Foucault, Michel. Naissance de la Clinique: une archéologie du regard medical. Paris: PUF, 1963.
———. Histoire de la sexualité Vol I: La Volonté de savor. Paris: Gallimard, 1976.
———. Histoire de la sexualité Vol II: L'Usage des plaisirs. Paris: Gallimard, 1984.
———. Histoire de la sexualité Vol III: Le Souci de soi. Paris: Gallimard, 1984.
Gilbert, James. Whose Fair? Experience, Memory, and the History of the Great St. Louis Exposition. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2009.
Grant, Elizabeth. “Race and Tourism in America’s First City.” Journal of Urban History 31, no.6 (2005): 850-
71.
Hooper-Greenhill, Eilean. Museums and Their Visitors, London and New York: Routledge, 1994.
Iwaya, Fumita. “‘Jintai no fushigi ten’ no shuryo to kokuhatsu (The End of ‘Body Worlds’ Exhibition and
Accusation).” Red Fox, published on January 31, 2011, accessed on May 9, 2015, http://redfox2667.
blog111.fc2.com/blog-entry-249.html?sp.
Jespersen, T. Christine, Alicita Rodriguez, and Joseph Starr. The Anatomy of “Body Worlds”: Critical Essays
on the Plastinated Cadavers of Gunther Von Hagens. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers, 2008.
Jones, Nora. “The Mütter Museum: The Body as Spectacle, Specimen, and Art.” PhD diss., Temple University,
2002.
Kawai, Yuu. Hakushin no kyochi: Jitsubutsu dori ni chakushoku sareta toshindai no ningyo no rekishi, oubei
hen (Ground of Reality: A History of Life-Sized and True-To-Life-Colored Dolls in Euro-American
Countries). Osaka: Fumiduki Sha, 2004.
Komori, Masaki. “Geijutsuka suru igaku hakubutsukan: Firaderufia ishi kyoukai Mutaa Hakubutsukan ni
okeru kaikaku (‘Ars Medica’ Strategy at Medical Museum: Reforms since 1980s at Mütter Museum in
Philadelphia).” Tenjigaku 54, no.1 (2017): 62-71.
Lantos, John D. Controversial Bodies: Thoughts on the Public Display of Plastinated Corpses. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011.
Macdonald, Sharon. The Politics of Display: Museum, Science, Culture. New York: Routledge, 1998.
———.“Expanding Museum Studies: An Introduction.” In A Companion to Museum Studies. Edited by Sharon
Macdonald. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2006, 1-12.
Marstine, Janet. “Introduction.” In New Museum Theory and Practice. Edited by Janet Marstine. Oxford:
Blackwell Publishing, 2006, 1-36.
———, ed. Routledge Companion to Museum Ethics. London: Routledge, 2011.
McIsaac, Peter M. “Worrying About Democratic Values: Body Worlds in German Context, 1996-2004.” In
73
Dead Bodies on Display: Museum Ethics in the History of the Mütter Museum
Museum and Difference. Edited by Daniel J. Sherman. Blooomington: Indiana University Press, 2007:
181-94, 199-202.
Nayar, Pramod K. Packaging Life: Cultures of the Everyday. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2009.
Redman, Samuel J. Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 2016.
Schiebinger, Londa. Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World. Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 2004.
Stafford, Barbara Maria. Body Criticism: Imaging the Unseen in Enlightenment Art and Medicine. Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 1991.
Thomson, Rosemarie Garland. Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture and
Literature. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.
Ulaby, Neda. “Origins of Exhibited Cadavers Questioned.” NPR, published on August 11, 2006, accessed on
July 20, 2016, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5637687.
Vergo, Peter., ed. The New Museology. London: Reaktion Books, 1989.
Wilson, Dudley. Signs and Portents: Monstrous Births from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment. London:
Routledge, 1993.
74