Are we truly justified in constantly making a cheap public spectacle of the bodies of murder victims?
I just read this warning on the blurb for the upcoming Baltimore three-day course on Jack the Ripper.
"Warning: not for the squeamish. Powerpoint images will be projected that will show the murder scenes and the corpses of the women killed."
I feel extremely uneasy about the way the images of the corpses are forever being published in books, online, in exhibitions etc. It seems to me to be extremely disrespectful, it cheapens the human dignity of the poor, innocent victims. It invades their privacy. They are used as cheap and gaudy exhibits to thrill and excite people, like those notorious freak-shows of the Victorian times.
Why is it always deemed necessary to show these gory images, that were never meant for wide public consumption?
How does looking at the face of a corpse help to establish who was Jack the Ripper? How does it add anything to our amateur investigation of the case? It tells us NOTHING that a textual description could not tell us just as well.
Once a detailed description of, say, Mary Kelly's injuries has been written, why do we need the photographs as well? Why isn't this woman afforded the slightest human dignity whatsoever?
How would you like it if your grandmother was murdered tomorrow and a picture that a police photographer took of her dead body was bandied all over the internet and repeatedly published in books without her permission or that of any of her family?
Do you think it is acceptable to constantly and widely exhibit these images just because the killings were so long ago, or because they were just cheap prostitutes, who are considered by some to be sub-human, rather than your sweet, white-haired granny?
I cannot help wondering if some perverted men get a thrill from looking at these images. Do authors provide the photos merely to increase book sales by gaining the custom of such perverts?
If I were given photos of Chapman's poisoning victims, depicting their pitiful, skeletal naked bodies, for example, I would rather DIE than publish them in a book just to get more sales. I would not do it even if it meant gaining tens of thousands of sales. I simpply could not bring myself to inflict more indignity on these poor women who already suffered enough by losing their lives.
Do you think that the gory photos of the Ripper's victims are so vital to our collective continuing investigations that our need to see them in every book, on every website, in every discussion or course or conference outweighs all moral considerations, all human decency, all rights to privacy, and all respect for the dead?
Helena
I just read this warning on the blurb for the upcoming Baltimore three-day course on Jack the Ripper.
"Warning: not for the squeamish. Powerpoint images will be projected that will show the murder scenes and the corpses of the women killed."
I feel extremely uneasy about the way the images of the corpses are forever being published in books, online, in exhibitions etc. It seems to me to be extremely disrespectful, it cheapens the human dignity of the poor, innocent victims. It invades their privacy. They are used as cheap and gaudy exhibits to thrill and excite people, like those notorious freak-shows of the Victorian times.
Why is it always deemed necessary to show these gory images, that were never meant for wide public consumption?
How does looking at the face of a corpse help to establish who was Jack the Ripper? How does it add anything to our amateur investigation of the case? It tells us NOTHING that a textual description could not tell us just as well.
Once a detailed description of, say, Mary Kelly's injuries has been written, why do we need the photographs as well? Why isn't this woman afforded the slightest human dignity whatsoever?
How would you like it if your grandmother was murdered tomorrow and a picture that a police photographer took of her dead body was bandied all over the internet and repeatedly published in books without her permission or that of any of her family?
Do you think it is acceptable to constantly and widely exhibit these images just because the killings were so long ago, or because they were just cheap prostitutes, who are considered by some to be sub-human, rather than your sweet, white-haired granny?
I cannot help wondering if some perverted men get a thrill from looking at these images. Do authors provide the photos merely to increase book sales by gaining the custom of such perverts?
If I were given photos of Chapman's poisoning victims, depicting their pitiful, skeletal naked bodies, for example, I would rather DIE than publish them in a book just to get more sales. I would not do it even if it meant gaining tens of thousands of sales. I simpply could not bring myself to inflict more indignity on these poor women who already suffered enough by losing their lives.
Do you think that the gory photos of the Ripper's victims are so vital to our collective continuing investigations that our need to see them in every book, on every website, in every discussion or course or conference outweighs all moral considerations, all human decency, all rights to privacy, and all respect for the dead?
Helena
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