Showing posts with label 19th century science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 19th century science. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2016

Freak Show

Freak Show: Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement and Profit by Robert Bogdan.  299 pages.

While the idea of attending a circus or carnival freak show is distasteful for many of us, from 1840 to 1940, these shows and displays were common across the U.S.   Author Robert Bogdan writes in his preface that "The meaning that disability has in our culture has been an interest of mine for a long time.  This book on 'freak shows' flows directly from a project in which I examined villains in horror and adventure movies."   Bogdan has done a lot of research and in this book presents the history of the traveling show in America, but also discusses the people, themselves.

I found the book to be interesting, and the author's take on this part of history to be sympathetic.   I knew some of the people he wrote about, like Tom Thumb and Lavinia Warren (a/k/a Mrs. Tom Thumb), and the Doll Family, but I didn't know much about the Hilton Sisters, or the history of "tattooed exotics."  The author included information on many people, including the managers and promoters of these shows.  It was also interesting to learn about how, as time went on, the ascent of professional medicine transformed these people from being seen as marvels to pathological specimens.   Bogdan did a lot of research, and his extensive notes at the back of the book are very helpful and insightful.

I thought Bogdan's philosophy to be thought-provoking.  He states, ""Our reaction to freaks is not a function of some deep-seated fear or some "energy" that they give off; it is, rather the result of our socialization, and of the way our social institutions managed these people's identities. Freak shows are not about isolated individuals...they are about organizations and patterned relationships between them and us. Freak is not a quality that belongs to the person on display. It is something that we created: a perspective, a set of practices - a social construction."  (Preface, p, x).


Saturday, November 30, 2013

The Signature of All Things

 The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert, 2013, 499 pp

This really well-written historical novel (by the author of Eat, Pray, Love) describes the life of a brilliant but socially awkward botanist, Alma Whittacre, the daughter of a self-made 19th-century millionaire who devotes her life to the study of moss. Moss may sound dull, but Alma is not. Gilbert so deftly describes her emotional and scientific progression thru various societies in England, Philadelphia, Tahiti and Amsterdam, as well as the colorful personalities (some actual historical figures) who enter her life with dramatic consequences, that her story seems fast-paced. The conflicts Alma faces as a woman, a scientist and a human being of her times are described in such a satisfying way that readers will find they've learned a lot about botany, scientific method and Victorian culture during the course of the book.