beboots: (Canada "discovery" history)
[personal profile] beboots
 Sometime in April, I think, I'm going to organize an excursion for some friends of mine (history dorks, all), which I want to entitle "A Day of the Dead at the U of A". Essentially, it's going to amount to making an appointment to visiting the mummy (we have a mummy! The only one in Western Canada! His nickname is Horace - AKA Horus)... and then, we'll go into the bowels of the Health Sciences library (which is itself in the middle of the labyrinthine building that is connected to the university hospital, so it's a quest to even get that far), heading down to the special collections room to look at... THIS. 

Warning: LJ cut because I'm morbid and some people don't really want to see books bound in human skin. A (horrifying) part of European heritage, people. 


Taken out of it's little black plastic box.



It is quite small, actually. Just a little bit more square than a bestselling paperback novel, but not much taller. A bit thicker, though. (Of course, since this book is so small, it does raise the horrifying possibility of what happened to the rest of the skin. Are there other books out there bound in the material from the same person?)



I like this warning. Because otherwise it seems that this book is only known through word-of-mouth through librarians. It's notorious... but I don't even known if it's in the online searchable library catalog.

In person, though, if you didn't know otherwise, it really could be mistaken for moleskin. 



For the curious, the book between the horrifying covers is a medical treatise from 1722, printed in Latin.

Not knowing more than what I can divine from my French skills and that one Latin 101 course I took in my first year, I THINK it's a reprinting of a classical medical text by a man named Celsus. At the very least there's a frontipiece opposite this page with the lithograph of a bust of a greco-roman looking man labeled "A. Corn. Celsus, ex iconibus a sambuco editis". The last part means, I think, something about this (image) being made from the image of something else. A sambuco or something. I'm not sure. Anybody who knows Latin, please tell me more!

BUT THAT'S NOT ALL in this room. There's also THIS in a box by the door, so you can't help but see it as you leave:


Yeah. That's what it looks like. Not content with the human skin book, which, with a bit of squinting and denial you can pretend it's something that it's not... this disperses no illusions. The little green card says:
"Dissections of an arm and leg, showing vasculature, prepared c. 1804 by John Mewburn as part of his surgical anatomy studies in London, brought to Upper Canada in 1832, and brought west by his grandson, Francis Hamilton Mewburn, in 1885. Dr. Frank Mewburn was the first Professor of Surgery at the University of Alberta. Donated by the Mewburn Family, 1984."
Yeah, it's down there with all the rare medical reference texts. 

All right, after that, we'll need something a bit more cheerful, y/y? So you don't go to bed horrified with me for showing you these images?

How about this? I spotted it, almost hiding between two books on nursing on the shelf above the books I was actually there to look at for my thesis research. (Shh- this isn't procrastination, this is education and exploration of the hidden archives of the university!)



Note the pen I placed there for scale. This book is almost adorably tiny. It was printed in... I want to say 1914, possibly a bit earlier. First World War-era or before, anyway. See inside: 


I just happened across the definition for hypnotism. It was the second page I flipped to when I opened the book randomly. I love that this definition is even in here. Hypnotism was once viewed with much more scientific credibility than it is today. ;)

The first page I opened it to, incidentally, explained the pronounciation and definition of chloroform, and admonished readers that the chemical "must always be kept in the dark" - although the book, mysteriously, gives no explanation for this stern warning. What will happen if you put it in direct sunlight? Will it become ineffective? Explode?  

I also have to include a few of the advertisements at the beginning and end of the book. It's a book of vital information for medical professionals, but the author will still try to sell you stuff! (And we thought that commercialism was something we only had to worry about in recent decades...)


Where's MY sewing pattern for a wimple like that?



Well, if there's no flaw in it's claim to be absolutely pure... and it's endorsed by not only His Majesty the King, Her Majesty the Queen AND Her Majesty Queen Alexandra(??)... and also the MEDICAL FACULTY...! Where's MY malted cocoa? (And really, how can you FAIL to endorse chocolate? <3 <3 <3)



Yeah guys, NOTICE THE VIROL SMILE.

Anyway, I hope that this post ended on a SLIGHTLY less depressing note. ;) I've been wanting to talk about the human skin book for a long long while. I hope that you were as morbidly interested in this subject as I was!

Date: 2011-03-01 02:52 am (UTC)
kuiskata: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kuiskata
We should totally tour all of these macabre things at the U of A! (Also, creepy. I...kind of want to peer closely at the human skin book and see if I can make out, you know, the skin. Does it look like skin? *hides*)

Question! Why did nurses wear that wimple? It doesn't... seem to serve any purpose. Tie your hair back anhd cover it, but why do you need the rest of the wimple hanging down?

...I need a chocolate icon or something. Because, chocolate.

Date: 2011-03-01 03:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
It looks VERY much like skin. I suspect it's from the small of someone's back, because it's very smooth. D: You can see some of the follicles.

I believe nurses wore the wimple like that. The nurse on 1920s street at Fort Ed wears one just like that. :)

I think it's a call back to the days when the Nursing Sisters were actually nuns, although by the First World War in Canada the order was secular.

Also, the wimple is SEXY, Cassidy dearest. ;) And it keeps your hair out of the way, as you said, in the days before hairnets. It also looks clean, neat and starched, which is a good image to have. Plus, if you look like a nun the men under your care will (in theory) think of you as less of a sexual object? (I'm just speculating.)

CHOCOLATE.

Date: 2011-03-01 03:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sharkflip.livejournal.com
Ah, collections. I fondly remember the day I was searching a shelf and opened a box with a human scalp in it. I was just looking for a raven rattle.

Our mummy's name was Milly, I believe, but the sarcophagus wasn't hers.

;)

Date: 2011-03-01 04:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
Seriously? A surprise human scalp? (I want to say "awesome" but that sounds too, uh... disrespectful?) Interesting! :D

See, it's times like these that I'm really leaning towards going into museum studies. There's just so much cool STUFF out there in the archives and special collections. :)

You guys had a mummy too? Now that, I can safely say, is awesome. :)

Date: 2011-03-01 04:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] avocado-love.livejournal.com
I love horrid stuff like this.

(That book looks like my old school dictionary I still have in my room. *shivers*).

Is it bad that the book is... oddly pretty?

Date: 2011-03-01 04:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
You're not alone in thinking the book pretty. Of course, you wouldn't go through all of that trouble just to make a book with a poor cover design, y/y? D:

Morbid stuff is interesting... but I still try not to think too hard about how they came about. D:

Date: 2011-03-01 04:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sharkflip.livejournal.com
You, my dear, are an excellent candidate for museum studies.

Date: 2011-03-01 04:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
It's definitely something I want to look into. I just need to do a bit of searching around to see where the best programs are in Canada/North America/wherever I want to be. :) I'm planning on applying for museum studies and/or translation courses... and/or grad studies in history? Could I theoretically do a combined masters in history and museum studies?

Date: 2011-03-01 07:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feral-shrew.livejournal.com
OMG I WOULD DRIVE THERE FOR THIS TOUR, AND I LIVE IN MICHIGAN. WHICH IS THAT ODDLY-SHAPED SHAPE JUST BY ONTARIO.

On Mesmerism: I have a WHOLE lot of history knowledge there, my professor-crush taught a history of psychiatry from the 1500s to the present, which also showed what people thought caused a disease, from God to toxins to personal morality flaws to having the wrong-shaped head to... The oddest part is with the world wars. WWI, they work out that shellshock isn't caused by fragments of shrapnel, it's a reaction to the combat. WWII... they forget all progress and start looking for lesions again.

I've DONE a couple dissections myself, and one was for vasculature. The awkward positioning of it (and the frequent necessity of resting an arm against the cadaver and/or coming in direct contact) make most people immensely squeamish, but it was awesome.

I do have snake-pictures I will load eventually. I also will probably put up the picture I drew for the boyfriend's Valentine's card because I think that LJers might appreciate it. (It's a werewolf holding a big red heart, and the inside mentions both Lupercalia and St. Valentine's Day.)

Date: 2011-03-01 11:48 pm (UTC)
kuiskata: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kuiskata
I want to say "cool," but...

I suppose. ;) Also, speculation is fun!

Date: 2011-03-02 12:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
SERIOUSLY IF YOU ARE EVER IN THE VICINITY OF EDMONTON I WILL GIVE YOU *ALL* THE TOURS. History stuff is awesome. :D

...I... really want to take that course. It sounds AMAZING. <3 I only know bits and pieces, mostly from the 19th century. The history of shellshock must be fascinating.

That Valentine's day card sound ADORABLE as well. :D Please post pictures!

Date: 2011-03-02 12:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feral-shrew.livejournal.com
History is SO FUN, and boyfriend and I both have the same plans-- eventually, when there is time, PhD! I want a PhD in history (especially medical) and he wants a philosophical doctorate in philosophy.

If you want just the 1500s dancing plagues, my poor professor's editor titled it "A Time to Dance, A Time to Die" (when he is the LEAST melodramatic person possible). He's coming out with a book on eugenics soon, and has been working like mad on it for over a year. John Waller = awesome.

Date: 2011-03-02 12:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
"I want to say "cool," but..."
I know! How enthusiastic is too enthusiastic when it comes to things like these?

Date: 2011-03-02 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beboots.livejournal.com
Yay for further education! :D Medical history is awesome and should definitely be further explored.

Definitely tell me when his book comes out! :D

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