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When I first saw the book Stuffed Animals and Pickled Heads: The Culture and Evolution of Natural History Museums by Stephen T. Asma, the title immediately caught my attention, and I knew that I definitely had to read this book. The book definitely drew a lot of odd looks from my colleagues while I was reading it.
Stuffed Animals and Pickled Heads is definitely not a book for the squeamish. In his first chapter, "Flesh-Eating Beetles and the Secret Art of Taxidermy," Asma introduces us to some of the interesting items found in the curiosity cabinet of Russian Czar Peter the Great. The "pickled heads" portion of his title comes from the preserved heads of Peter the Great's lover Mary Hamilton and his wife Catherine's lover William Mons. Peter had them both beheaded and placed in Catherine's chambers, "Maybe he was thinking that he and Catherine could put their past infidelities behind them and start fresh," muses Asma. Peter's curiosity cabinet also contained the body of a boy named Foma who suffered from an abnormality known as "lobster claw." It was these heads and the body of Foma that first got Asma interested in studying the development of modern natural history museums from these curiosity cabinets, as he wondered, "how do you stuff a human?" In Chapter One, Asma explores the techniques of taxidermy and how these skills were originally used in curiosity cabinets and artistic displays, and how taxidermy has come to be used in modern natural history museums. He takes the reader backstage in Chicago's Field Museum to see the dermestid beetles that the preparators use to de-flesh recently deceased specimens for study and display in the museum.
The copyright of the article Book Review: Stuffed Animals and Pickled Heads in Paleontology is owned by . Permission to republish Book Review: Stuffed Animals and Pickled Heads in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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