The History of Grave Robbing
Medical Body Snatching in the Victorian and Edwardian Eras
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Narrado por:
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De:
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ALANA SANCHEZ
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
What if the dead were the price of medical progress?
In the Victorian and Edwardian eras, Britain’s medical schools faced an impossible dilemma: anatomy demanded human bodies, yet the law provided almost none. The result was a hidden trade in the dead—grave robbing, body snatching, and, in its darkest moments, murder.
The History of Grave Robbing traces the rise and fall of the resurrection men, the legal contradictions that enabled them, and the social inequalities that made the poor uniquely vulnerable in death. From the Burke and Hare murders to the Anatomy Act of 1832, from workhouses and hospitals to colonial Australia, this meticulously researched study reveals how modern medicine was built on bodies taken without consent.
Clear, scholarly, and deeply unsettling, this book exposes a forgotten history where science, law, and class collided—and where the dead paid the cost of progress.