Autopsies of the real: Resurrecting the dead
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3989/asclepio.2011.v63.i2.497Keywords:
Autopsy, Mummification, Catholicism, Pi y Molist, González VelascoAbstract
The sense of the real, or the material—the dead body—as an inextricable part of the sacred does not disappear in the secular environment of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This article analyzes specific humanitarian narratives centered on the practice of autopsy and mummification, in which the traces of Catholicism act as a kind of spectral discourse of the imagination, where the real is configured in forms of the uncanny, the monstrous or the sacred.
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