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Grave Doubts: Victorian Medicine, Moral Panic, and the Signs of Death

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2012

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Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 2003

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References

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41 The Foucauldian inspiration for many of the recent medicalization models is clear. Powerful challenges to Foucault's notion of discipline include Ignatieff, Michael, “State, Civil Society and Total Institutions: A Critique of Recent Social Histories of Punishment,” in Social Control and the State, ed. Cohen, Stanley and Scull, Andrew (New York, 1983), pp. 75105Google Scholar; and Garland, David, “Foucault's Discipline and Punish: An Exposition and Critique,” American Bar Foundation Research Journal 4 (Fall 1986): 847–80Google Scholar.

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71 Ruth Richardson, Death, Dissection, pp. 263–81; The Times (4 May 1842, and 5, 7, 9, and 10 June 1862).

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74 “Grime,” “Statistics of Premature Interments,” Notes and Queries 2, 3d ser. (9 August 1862): 110.

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87 Hicks, A. Braxton, Hints to Medical Men concerning the Granting of Certificates of Death (London, 1889), pp. 34, 13Google Scholar; Child's Guardian (May 1890), p. 57; Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords on the Children's Life Insurance Bill, PP, 1891, vol. 11, questions 134, 137, 142–43, 146–47, 168–69.

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90 English Mechanic and World of Science (27 September 1895), p. 137; Undertakers' and Funeral Directors' Journal (22 January 1895), p. 209; Manchester Courier (24 September 1895).

91 Daily Chronicle (10 September 1895); B.M.J. (29 February 1896), p. 540; Punch (2 March 1895), p. 99.

92 The Times (20 September 1895); Daily Chronicle (13 September 1895).

93 Hartmann, Franz, Buried Alive: An Examination into the Occult Causes of Apparent Death, Trance, and Catalepsy (Boston, 1895)Google Scholar. Hartmann's shilling book was reprinted as Premature Burial (London, 1896).

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97 Tebb and Vollum, Premature Burial, p. 64.

98 B.M.J. (29 February 1896), p. 540; “What Is Death?” Spectator 77 (26 December 1896): 933–34. The Times (30 October 1896) reviewed Tebb and Vollum's book along with another offering from Swan Sonnenschein, an autobiographical account of body-snatching in Regency London. See The Diary of a Resurrectionist, 1811–1812, ed. Bailey, James Blake (London, 1896)Google Scholar.

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103 Vaccination Inquirer 39 (1 March 1917): 45; Tebb, and Vollum, , Premature Burial, 2d ed. (London, 1905), pp. 1920Google Scholar.

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105 Metcalfe, Out of the Clouds, p. 182.

106 Maintenance Committee, History, pp. 168–69; Vegetarian Messenger 4 (August 1853): 18; Horley Advertiser and County Post (10 February 1917); Vaccination Inquirer 39 (1 March 1917): 47.

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112 Manchester Courier (24 September 1895).

113 Tebb and Vollum, Premature Burial, p. 1.

114 List of Officers of the Army of the United States from 1779 to 1900 (1900; reprint, New York, 1967), p. 647Google Scholar; Tebb, and , Vollum, Premature Burial, 2d ed., pp. 1619Google Scholar; Report of Medical Inspector Edward P. Vollum, 25 July 1863, in The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records, ser. 1, vol. 27, pt. 1 (Washington, D.C., 1902), pp. 2528Google Scholar. Vollum retired from the U.S. Army in 1891, traveled extensively for the next decade, and died in Munich on 31 May 1902. The colonel's body was cremated, rendering unnecessary the direction that “a bottle of chloroform with a leaky stopple” be placed in his coffin. See Hartmann, Buried Alive, p. 146.

115 Perils of Premature Burial (April–June 1909), p. 37.

116 Burial Reformer (October–December 1905), p. 21, and (January–March 1906), p. 27; Hospital (2 June 1906), p. 170.

117 Glover, David, Vampires, Mummies, and Liberals: Bram Stoker and the Politics of Popular Fiction (Durham, N.C., 1996), p. 71Google Scholar. On the late-Victorian gothic body, see also Malchow, Gothic Images, chap. 3; Hurley, Kelly, The Gothic Body: Sexuality, Materialism, and Degeneration at the Fin de Siècle (Cambridge, 1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Scandura, Jani, “Deadly Professions: Dracula, Undertakers, and the Embalmed Corpse,” Victorian Studies 40 (Autumn 1996): 130Google Scholar.

118 Tebb's will specified that his body should be cremated, but not “until it exhibits unmistakeable [sic] evidence of decomposition.” Last will of William Tebb, Principal Registry Family Division, London.

119 Seventh Annual Report of the Psycho-Therapeutic Society (London, 1908), p. 2Google Scholar; Hallam, Arthur, The Key to Perfect Health (London, 1912), pp. 1518, 24–25Google Scholar.

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122 Vegetarian (8 January 1898), pp. 20–21; Burial Reformer (January–March 1906), p. 26.

123 James, J. Brindley, Death and Its Verification (London, 1908), pp. 2526Google Scholar, and back matter.

124 Perils of Premature Burial (April–June 1909), p. 33, (July–September 1912), p. 45, and (October–December 1913), p. 77; John Bull (3 September 1910), p. 346; Law Times 124 (18 January 1908): 262; Second Report of the Departmental Committee on Coroners and Coroners' Inquests, pt. 1, PP, 1910, vol. 21, p. 20.

125 Hospital (7 December 1907), p. 252, and (5 March 1910), p. 647.

126 In 1936, the remnant of Tebb's LAPPB merged with the Council for the Disposition of the Dead, a group then concerned about registering funeral directors. The Times (5 February 1936).

127 Becker, Outsiders, pp. 147–63; Cohen, Folk Devils, p. 127; Goode and Ben-Yehuda, Moral Panics, pp. 79–82.

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