Hello everyone, this is my first posting here, having followed debates on the forums for some time. I'm Michael, I'm an artist with a long-standing JTR interest who currently lives and works in the East End.
Trying to make sense of MJK1, I recently photoshopped myself a colourisation of the image, and used Bond's post-mortem report in order to understand what I was seeing. Reading that report, certain things struck me as peculiar or interesting. Bond states that:
The right thigh was denuded in front to the bone, the flap of skin, including the external organs of generation & part of the right buttock.
And also:
The flaps removed from the abdomen and thighs were on a table.
What struck me as odd was that this is often described as a 'sex crime', but in fact we see here what might almost be called a disregard for the external genitalia of the poor victim - simply removed as part of a large slice of flesh and heaped on a nearby table - whereas other parts are used almost as treasured props in a theatrical mise-en-scène: liver between the feet; uterus, kidneys and one breast acting as a pillow; another breast down by the right foot; intestine and spleen either side of the torso; the heart 'absent'.
This led me down several meandering and unresolved avenues of thought: are these 'sex crimes' in a normal sense? What are the normal criteria by which investigators classify something as a sex crime? Is sex about surfaces or can it be - even if on an unconscious level - about things such as organs and bloodied meat (in other words - is JTR's pathology a complete deviation from normal male sexuality, or simply a perverted exaggeration of it?)
Skin is the attractive part - the warm, soft, living surface. In Kelly's room, given for once a relatively free hand, JTR seems to want to get rid of as much of it as possible, cut it off, and dump it on the table - so that he can get down to what really fascinates him; the insides. What do other posters think that represents - a disinterest in the surface of the female, or an expression of hatred for the surface of the female? I don't quite know, and I think that the answer may, partly, determine what type of man we are dealing with.
Trying to make sense of MJK1, I recently photoshopped myself a colourisation of the image, and used Bond's post-mortem report in order to understand what I was seeing. Reading that report, certain things struck me as peculiar or interesting. Bond states that:
The right thigh was denuded in front to the bone, the flap of skin, including the external organs of generation & part of the right buttock.
And also:
The flaps removed from the abdomen and thighs were on a table.
What struck me as odd was that this is often described as a 'sex crime', but in fact we see here what might almost be called a disregard for the external genitalia of the poor victim - simply removed as part of a large slice of flesh and heaped on a nearby table - whereas other parts are used almost as treasured props in a theatrical mise-en-scène: liver between the feet; uterus, kidneys and one breast acting as a pillow; another breast down by the right foot; intestine and spleen either side of the torso; the heart 'absent'.
This led me down several meandering and unresolved avenues of thought: are these 'sex crimes' in a normal sense? What are the normal criteria by which investigators classify something as a sex crime? Is sex about surfaces or can it be - even if on an unconscious level - about things such as organs and bloodied meat (in other words - is JTR's pathology a complete deviation from normal male sexuality, or simply a perverted exaggeration of it?)
Skin is the attractive part - the warm, soft, living surface. In Kelly's room, given for once a relatively free hand, JTR seems to want to get rid of as much of it as possible, cut it off, and dump it on the table - so that he can get down to what really fascinates him; the insides. What do other posters think that represents - a disinterest in the surface of the female, or an expression of hatred for the surface of the female? I don't quite know, and I think that the answer may, partly, determine what type of man we are dealing with.
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