Iconic Corpse by Abigail Lowe

Page 24

Jeremey As the father of modern utilitarianism, Jeremy Bentham believed that his usefulness didn’t have to end with his death. In his last will and testament, Bentham instructed that his body should be dissected, and his preserved corpse displayed, and occasionally taken out to socialize when his colleagues assembled. And since 1850, University College London has been home to what’s left of Jeremy Bentham’s corpse. And while Bentham presents an odd but relatively innocuous figure in the halls of UCL, his curb appeal is largely because he’s not quite all there! You see it’s his head.

That’s n real hea

Old white man gumby

Bentham left instructions with Doctor Thomas Southwood Smith on how to create his auto-icon, after a public lecture that took place over his corpse. During Bentham’s dissection, his skin was stripped from his bones and his ‘soft parts’ were placed inside labeled glass jars, like wine decanters. His skeleton was then articulated with copper wire, so that he could be moved and arranged like old, white man Gumby, and dressed in one of his black suits. Then the suit was stuffed with cotton, straw, and hay, and his abdominal cavity contained moth repellents, naphthalene and

But the piece de resistance of the whole shebang was Jeremy Bentham’s head. Well, it was supposed to be at least. As outlined in his will, Bentham intended for his head to be mummified as a Mokomokai, as practiced by the Maoris of New Zealand. The way the Maoris did it was to remove the corpse’s brain and eyes, boil the head, then smoke it over a fire and dry it in the sun. But when Smith was done, Bentham’s head wasn’t quite transformed into the triumphant Mokomokai he’d envisioned.

Auto Icon


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.