Source: Rex
All men must die: time of death TBC
âWhen is death?â may seem like a simple question to answer, but an academic conference, with this question as its title, set out to explore why this is only partly true.
The University of Leicester event, organised by Shane McCorristine, Wellcome Trust postdoctoral fellow, and Sarah Tarlow, professor of archaeology, explored everything from organ donation and grave reuse to âsurvivalâ on the internet and reported post-mortem âsightingsâ of leading Nazis.
Keynote speakers offered broad perspectives. Reflecting on âDeathâs impossible dateâ, Douglas Davies, professor in the department of theology and religion at Durham University, noted that different body parts can continue to function for different periods of time and that many religious traditions believe peopleâs souls or âenduring identitiesâ are immortal. Yet if âdeath has many dates, even when dealing with biological bodiesâ, this was even truer for âsocial bodiesâ.
Elizabeth Hurren, reader in medical humanities at Leicester, agreed that, at least for early modern murderers subjected to capital punishment, âbecoming really deadâŠtakes timeâ. This was not only because many survived the gallows and had to be killed âagainâ in the dissection room. There was also a carefully choreographed process whereby social death (conviction for homicide) was followed by legal death (hanging), medical death (absence of signs of life) and the deliberate infliction of âharmâ through dissection and dismemberment.
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Dr McCorristineâs paper applied this argument to the specific case of William Corder, who killed his lover Maria Marten in the notorious âRed Barnâ murder of 1827.
His body was âdissected for public viewâ, anatomised before an audience of surgeons and medical students and then âdisassembled into distinct parts for posterityâ. His articulated skeleton, for example, was displayed as âa focal point for visitors and donorsâ at the West Suffolk Hospital, used for teaching anatomy and âeven occasionally brought to dances by the nursesâ.
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âAlthough Corder died in August 1828,â concluded Dr McCorristine, âthe exact âwhenâ of his death was made uncertain by the post-mortem journeys of his corpseâ.
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