VomLehn2006a
VomLehn2006a | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | VomLehn2006a |
Author(s) | Dirk vom Lehn |
Title | The Body as Interactive Display: Examining Bodies in a Public Exhibition |
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Tag(s) | Body Worlds, anatomy, body image, ethnomethodology, video analysis |
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Year | 2006 |
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Journal | Sociology of Health & Illness |
Volume | 28 |
Number | 2 |
Pages | 223–251 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2006.00489.x |
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Abstract
‘Body Worlds’ is an exhibition of human bodies that is currently touring Europe, the Far East and the USA. The public display of ‘real’ human bodies has caused public controversy and debate about the moral and educational value of the exhibition. Relatively little academic research, however, has been undertaken to explore how visitors see and reflect on the exhibits. In this journal, Tony Walter recently examined messages people left in the exhibition's comment-books to reveal how people saw the bodies. His investigation provides interesting insights into people's understanding of and attitude to Body Worlds. This paper complements Walter's findings by analysing video-recordings of visitors looking at the ‘plastinated’ bodies at the showing of Body Worlds in London in 2002/03. The analysis reveals how people anatomise the exhibits and consider them in the light of their knowledge and experience of ‘real’ human bodies, such as those of other people and their own. The paper concludes with a discussion of how the observations and findings from the analysis bear upon debates on Body Worlds and in the sociology of health and illness.
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