Queen Victoria's Skull

Queen Victoria's Skull

Author: David Stack

Publisher: Bloomsbury Continuum

Published: 2008-08-02

Total Pages: 378

ISBN-13:

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A hugely entertaining study that goes beyond biography to vividly portray Victorian life in a wider framework.


The Skull Collectors

The Skull Collectors

Author: Ann Fabian

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2010-10-15

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13: 0226233499

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When Philadelphia naturalist Samuel George Morton died in 1851, no one cut off his head, boiled away its flesh, and added his grinning skull to a collection of crania. It would have been strange, but perhaps fitting, had Morton’s skull wound up in a collector’s cabinet, for Morton himself had collected hundreds of skulls over the course of a long career. Friends, diplomats, doctors, soldiers, and fellow naturalists sent him skulls they gathered from battlefields and burial grounds across America and around the world. With The Skull Collectors, eminent historian Ann Fabian resurrects that popular and scientific movement, telling the strange—and at times gruesome—story of Morton, his contemporaries, and their search for a scientific foundation for racial difference. From cranial measurements and museum shelves to heads on stakes, bloody battlefields, and the “rascally pleasure” of grave robbing, Fabian paints a lively picture of scientific inquiry in service of an agenda of racial superiority, and of a society coming to grips with both the deadly implications of manifest destiny and the mass slaughter of the Civil War. Even as she vividly recreates the past, Fabian also deftly traces the continuing implications of this history, from lingering traces of scientific racism to debates over the return of the remains of Native Americans that are held by museums to this day. Full of anecdotes, oddities, and insights, The Skull Collectors takes readers on a darkly fascinating trip down a little-visited but surprisingly important byway of American history.


A Measure of Perfection

A Measure of Perfection

Author: Charles Colbert

Publisher: UNC Press Books

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 474

ISBN-13: 9780807846735

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Despite its widespread popularity in antebellum America, phrenology has rarely been taken seriously as a cultural phenomenon. Charles Colbert seeks to redress this neglect by demonstrating the important contributions the theory made to artistic developmen


The Powers of Dignity

The Powers of Dignity

Author: Nick Bromell

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2021-01-04

Total Pages: 165

ISBN-13: 1478012803

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In The Powers of Dignity Nick Bromell unpacks Frederick Douglass's 1867 claim that he had “elaborated a political philosophy” from his own “slave experience.” Bromell shows that Douglass devised his philosophy because he found that antebellum Americans' liberal-republican understanding of democracy did not provide a sufficient principled basis on which to fight anti-Black racism. To remedy this deficiency, Douglass deployed insights from his distinctively Black experience and developed a Black philosophy of democracy. He began by contesting the founders' racist assumptions about humanity and advancing instead a more robust theory of “the human” as a collection of human “powers.” He asserted further that the conscious exercise of those powers is what confirms human dignity and that human rights and democracy come into being as ways to affirm and protect that dignity. Thus, by emphasizing the powers and the dignity of all citizens, deriving democratic rights from these, and promoting a remarkably activist, power-oriented model of citizenship, Douglass's Black political philosophy aimed to rectify two major failings of US democracy in his time and ours: its complacence and its racism.


Man and Nature

Man and Nature

Author: George P. Marsh

Publisher: Courier Dover Publications

Published: 2021-04-14

Total Pages: 483

ISBN-13: 0486847284

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This landmark text analyzes the impact of human action on nature by linking the environmental degradation of ancient Mediterranean civilization to the United States of the 1800s. As profoundly topical today as it was in 1864.


The Mind of Primitive Man

The Mind of Primitive Man

Author: Franz Boas

Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand

Published: 2023-01-22

Total Pages: 302

ISBN-13: 3368613871

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Reprint of the original, first published in 1938.