I realise that this is not quite the right thread thematically, but I assume that if I start a new thread or burry this information in any of the old threads about the Mary Kelly scene photographs, it might remain unnoticed.
I did a little search in Paris today, and located a printed catalogue of Aléxandre Lacassagne's collection of papers (which are currently located at the Bibliothèque municipale in Lyon), allegedly 222 p. long, but I suspect that this is a typo and it essentially means 22 p., as the same catalogue is listed elsewhere as 24 p. long. (Plus 222 pages is a little EXTREMELY massive for a catalogue, despite the fact that French criminologist Aléxandre Lacassagne was an extremely and admirably prolific scientist, author of – among tons of other books and essays in criminal psychology and forensic medicine – Jacques l'éventreur et les crimes sadiques, 1899.) In addition to this catalogue I located the catalogue for an exhibition which took place at the Bibliothèque municipale in Lyon from January 27 to May 15, 2004: Aléxandre Lacassagne: le médécin et le criminel, 1843-1924. I've no idea of if anyone on casebook has been aware of this exhibition.
Can you imagine the (off, off, off) eventuality of the original photos of the Mary Kelly scene having been displayed among the materials in this exhibition?!?! I'm about to investigate this further next week. I might be able to have a look at the exhibition catalogue on Monday already.
To Rob Clack:
Hi Rob, I'll email you with more details on this soon. I'm also researching Adrien Stock, the editor for all Lacassagne works in Lyon. From Stock's own writings (sometimes under the pen name Gérôme Coquard or Coquart) it strongly appears that he was Jewish, literate, and proficient in medical science. I'll try to find out if any dépôt for his publishing house has survived. Plus I've asked my boss, who was recently in Lyon, to ask around about the Lacassagne family (as I've spotted the name locally on a census search). The fun part is, I didn't even explain him why I'm interested in this, making him an accidental Ripperologist in the process! Were there to be any Lacassagne antecedents in Lyon, it might be worth a shot asking them also about the papers of Adrien Storck, Lacassagne's editor.
I did a little search in Paris today, and located a printed catalogue of Aléxandre Lacassagne's collection of papers (which are currently located at the Bibliothèque municipale in Lyon), allegedly 222 p. long, but I suspect that this is a typo and it essentially means 22 p., as the same catalogue is listed elsewhere as 24 p. long. (Plus 222 pages is a little EXTREMELY massive for a catalogue, despite the fact that French criminologist Aléxandre Lacassagne was an extremely and admirably prolific scientist, author of – among tons of other books and essays in criminal psychology and forensic medicine – Jacques l'éventreur et les crimes sadiques, 1899.) In addition to this catalogue I located the catalogue for an exhibition which took place at the Bibliothèque municipale in Lyon from January 27 to May 15, 2004: Aléxandre Lacassagne: le médécin et le criminel, 1843-1924. I've no idea of if anyone on casebook has been aware of this exhibition.
Can you imagine the (off, off, off) eventuality of the original photos of the Mary Kelly scene having been displayed among the materials in this exhibition?!?! I'm about to investigate this further next week. I might be able to have a look at the exhibition catalogue on Monday already.
To Rob Clack:
Hi Rob, I'll email you with more details on this soon. I'm also researching Adrien Stock, the editor for all Lacassagne works in Lyon. From Stock's own writings (sometimes under the pen name Gérôme Coquard or Coquart) it strongly appears that he was Jewish, literate, and proficient in medical science. I'll try to find out if any dépôt for his publishing house has survived. Plus I've asked my boss, who was recently in Lyon, to ask around about the Lacassagne family (as I've spotted the name locally on a census search). The fun part is, I didn't even explain him why I'm interested in this, making him an accidental Ripperologist in the process! Were there to be any Lacassagne antecedents in Lyon, it might be worth a shot asking them also about the papers of Adrien Storck, Lacassagne's editor.
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