
A series of bizarre disappearances filled the citizens of early nineteenth-century Scotland with terror. When the perpetrators were finally apprehended in 1828, their motive roiled the nation: William Burke and William Hare had murdered for profit. The cadavers supplied a ready payout, courtesy of Dr. Robert Knox, who was desperate for anatomical subjects. Nearly two hundred years later, these scandalous murders continue to fire imagination in Scotland and beyond. From the start, the sensational events provoked artists and writers. While Sir Walter Scott resisted public comment, his correspondence gives his trenchant private opinion and shows him working busily behind the scenes and against the doctor. Many more mined the news outright. Serial novelist David Pae exploited the disturbance to lobby for religious belief in an increasingly secular world. A subsequent generation resurrected the grisly drama as fodder for the Victorian gothic-the murders figure prominently in Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Body Snatcher" and, more obliquely, in Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The twentieth century saw the specters of Burke and Hare emerge in James Bridie's play The Anatomist, Hollywood horror films, television programs like Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Frankensteinian retellings from Alasdair Gray. In this century, the story has been picked up by Smallville and Doctor Who. Recent allusions and reenactments range from the somber-in popular detective fiction by Ian Rankin-to the dark, camp comedy of Fringe Festival performances and the slapstick of John Landis's Burke and Hare.Featuring over thirty images and canvassing a wide range of media-from contemporary newspaper accounts and private correspondence to Japanese comic books and videogames-The Doctor Dissected analyzes the afterlife of this national trauma and considers its singular place in Scottish history.
This work investigates how the 1828 Burke and Hare murders evolved from a localized criminal event into a persistent cultural motif within Scottish and international media. Caroline McCracken-Flesher, a scholar of Scottish literature and culture, utilizes a multidisciplinary framework to examine the transformation of this historical trauma. By tracing the narrative arc of the murders across two centuries, the author argues that the figure of the doctor and the cadaver serves as a flexible symbol for shifting societal anxieties regarding science, morality, and secularization. The text synthesizes historical records with a broad analysis of artistic adaptations to demonstrate the enduring resonance of the scandal.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of cultural memory and the intersection of crime and media. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a thorough and rigorous examination of the subject matter for those interested in the evolution of historical narratives.
Page Count:
285
Publication Date:
2012-01-01
ISBN-10:
0190208597
ISBN-13:
9780190208592
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