Tuesday, March 22, 2005
Body Worlds
Where do death, plastic, Chicago, and Germany come together? Body Worlds, an exhibit of human bodies that have been plasticized by a German scientist and are now on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. The exhibit manages to be weird, disgusting, cool, and fascinating all at the same time. Where else can one find muscles flying off the bones in all directions, real nerve fibers and spinal cord still attached, and a man holding his brain in his hand while riding a horse? I spent over an hour sitting next to a guy holding up his skin for the world to see. Some of the displays evade description, yet others are real eye-openers to the ravages of disease on the body. There are comparisons of healthy lungs to those of smokers, a slice of a brain with a tumor, a stomach with ulcers, body slices of obese people, joints from people with arthritis, a skeleton with scoliosis, and many more things that one almost never gets to see up close and in person. Some of the most fascinating are the people posed with nothing but their network of arteries in place. It is amazing how many there actually are. Even with how fascinatingly complex the bodies are, it is difficult to keep from thinking about who they were while they were still alive, walking around like you and me. They used to have lives, friends, families, thoughts, and emotions. The signs describing the bodies seemed very cold when they described them, not as men and women, but as "plasticines." One of the cadavers was a pregnant lady who was displayed along with her infant who had died along with her. Among the most difficult things to look at were the body parts of young children and babies. In the end, one has to realize that, although they used to be living human beings, all that is left on display is their plasticized body, not themselves.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Every semester before I introduce my students to our cadavers, I take time to talk about the gift the person has made and how valuable the experience will be for them. The experience is just what you have described with Body Worlds. Gunther Von Hagens has opened up to the general public the experience that was usually reserved for college and medical students. One cannot help then discuss what truly makes the person...their phenomenal mind and soul. There are two books I would recommend you read. First, STIFF, which is a history of human cadavers and how they have been used within our society. The second, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, a memior of Jean Bauby. Bauby was a successful editor who, at a young age, had a midbrain stroke that left him completely cognitive yet trapped within a body that was no longer useful. His only means of communication was through "batting" his eyes. With the help of a therapist who developed a mechanism by which he could communicate, Bauby writes about his experiences in his last years of life.
Body Worlds wasn't as gross as I thought it would be, but usually I get grossed out by dead bodies. Not so much by animals as by humans. While we were waiting for a couple of people from our group, we sat by the guy holding up his skin and we just became imune to the grossness of the situation. It was rather funny to hear the little kids ask their parents, "why does he still have his belly button?"
posted by C
Post a Comment