Reviews    Please click the Current Issue button above to return to the contents page
 
Stiff: the Curious Lives of Human Cadavers
 
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
 
Nip/Tuck
 
What's on the webEthics in medicine
 
Fulbright International Summer Institute in Pamporovo
 
Medical training did not teach me what I really needed to know
 
Minerva
 
Write a response to this article
 
Email this article to a friend
   


Stiff: the Curious Lives of Human Cadavers


Mary Roach

Viking
2003
£14.99
304 pages
ISBN 0 670 91217 4
Rating:****

I have spent the past few years deeply embroiled in the study of how to prevent Londoners from dying. But I have never devoted much time to wondering what happens to their remains once they are actually dead. Nevertheless, human remains have something morbidly interesting about them, and this subject provides American journalist Mary Roach with more than enough material for her fascinating book.

Many people donate their bodies to science with the hope that in death they may help others to live more successfully, so conferring a kind of immortality. But beyond the donating of organs and dissection, a world of alternative fates exists for our earthly remains, and Roach guides us through a banquet of possibilities. A cadaver really is useful to research, like a person in many important respects—size, shape, tissue type—but totally without complaint as it unflinchingly researches car crash injuries or bullet wounds. As a result, cadavers have been used in the development of many of the surgical advances of the past century and continue to be used in training. Cadavers were used to research the Turin shroud, left out in the sun for forensic research, used to test France's first guillotine, and provide valuable clues as to the causes of passenger aircraft disasters.

As the pages rack up, Roach widens her remit to issues relating to death and the dead and as she does takes the opportunity to draw on many amusing stories of quackery. One that I remember is that of the creative French doctor Jean Bapiste's technique of rhythmic tongue pulling to emphatically establish death and of others' attempts to weigh the body before and after death to determine the weight of the soul. Stiff also describes more recent attempts at head transplants and a Swedish movement to encourage the composting of human remains.

This subject could be very dull in the hands of many pathologists, but the non-medical Roach brings an impressive insight and, as a writer, has a witty and irreverent style. Stiff is informative, entertaining, and funny and as a result is a much more enjoyable read than your average popular science book.

Stephen Ginn
fifth year medical student Barts and the London School of Medicine, London

Email: stephen_ginn@btinternet.com

Click here for more information
 
 

Write a response to an article

Guidelines: We intend publishing within 24 hours all responses that contribute substantially to the topic under discussion. To avoid points that have already been made please read other people's responses before posting your own. All responses will be eligible for publication in the paper studentBMJ, providing that current appointment and place of work are given. Name and email address are required to send a response and will be published with the response.

Please note: When writing a respnse to a response, please enter the original title of the article and the author of the response you are responding to.

Name:
      
Email:
      
Current appointment / course, year:
      
Place of work / study:
      
Suggested title for your response:
      
Name of article, author and issue number:
      

Your Response:

Email a friend